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Knowledge and recognition of ecosystem services among the general public in a drainage basin in Scania, Southern Sweden

Author

  • Lillemor Lewan
  • Tore Söderqvist

Summary, in English

Human preferences are likely to depend on such things as knowledge and information, propaganda and advertising, and formal (laws) and informal (norms) institutions. We focus on knowledge about how nature works and how this may be manifested in recognition of ecosystem services among the general public. Participants and non-participants in a plant nutrient abatement programme with detention ponds in a river drainage area in Scania, Southern Sweden, were asked to rank some selected ecosystem services, classified as visible services, invisible services and services involving human activities in nature. Three studied groups of local actors were originally not familiar with the concept of ecosystem services, but the concept was easily grasped. The results of the study include the following findings: (1) The groups of local actors were consistent in ranking the groups of visible and invisible services higher than the group of services involving human activities, but there were considerable differences in their ranking of individual services. (2) The generally high priority given to invisible services can partly, but not fully, be explained by the existence of the abatement programme. (3) There was uncertainty regarding relationships among and the relative importance of different ecosystem services. (4) Some informants had multiple preferences. In fact the role people chose to play may have larger impact on preferences than the level of information. (5) Several interviewees objected to the idea of ranking services, and preferred to view nature as a whole. The results are discussed from a knowledge perspective, and we conclude that a widespread recognition of ecosystem services in policy and economics cannot be expected until the general public has gained some critical level of basic knowledge about functions in nature.

Publishing year

2002

Language

English

Pages

459-467

Publication/Series

Ecological Economics

Volume

42

Issue

3

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Biological Sciences

Keywords

  • ranking
  • preferences
  • knowledge
  • ecosystem services
  • plant nutrient

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0921-8009