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Sökning: WFRF:(Anderson Pippin M. L.)

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  • Goodness, Julie, et al. (författare)
  • Exploring the links between functional traits and cultural ecosystem services to enhance urban ecosystem management
  • 2016
  • Ingår i: Ecological Indicators. - : Elsevier BV. - 1470-160X .- 1872-7034. ; 70, s. 597-605
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Functional traits have been proposed as a more mechanistic way than species data alone to connect biodiversity to ecosystem processes and function in ecological research. Recently, this framework has also been broadened to include connections of traits to ecosystem services. While many links between traits and ecosystem processes/functions are easily and logically extended to regulating, supporting, and provisioning services, connections to cultural services have not yet been dealt with in depth. We argue that addressing this gap may involve a renegotiation of what have traditionally been considered traits, and a targeted effort to include and expand upon efforts to address traits-cultural ecosystem services links in traits research. Traits may also offer a better way to explore the recognition and appreciation of biodiversity. Drawing upon examples from outside the explicit traits literature, we present a number of potential connections between functional traits and cultural ecosystem services for attention in future research. Finally, we explore considerations and implications of employing a traits approach in urban areas, and examine how connections between traits and ecosystem services could be developed as indicators in a research and management context to generate a robust and resilient supply of ecosystem services.
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  • Goodness, Julie, 1985- (författare)
  • Shaping urban environments through human selection for plant traits
  • 2018
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Cities, as home to the majority of the world’s people, are significant sites for addressing challenges of achieving sustainability and securing human wellbeing. Urban environments are complex social-ecological systems, and meeting these challenges requires better understandings of the interactions of social and ecological elements. While there are many possible lenses through which to study social-ecological systems, this thesis examines the potential of a traits approach as one way to link ecological elements to social values. In ecology, functional traits have been defined as the characteristics of organisms that determine how organisms respond to the environment, and how they affect ecosystem processes, functions, and services. While functional traits have an established history of being linked to ecosystem processes and functions, they have only recently been extended to social aspects through the operationalization of the ecosystem services concept. As such, there is a distinct gap in identifying traits that are relevant and important to people. This interdisciplinary thesis attempts to bridge some of this lacuna, through empirical studies conducted in two cities: Cape Town, South Africa, and Stockholm, Sweden. Paper 1 addresses connections between traits and social values generally across cities through a literature review that examines connections between traits and cultural ecosystem services. Paper 2 explores preferences for traits and reasons for plant selection in the context of Cape Town. Paper 3 examines vegetation patterns and the expression of socially-valued traits across different land cover and land use classes in Stockholm. Paper 4 serves as a synthesis and comparison piece between Cape Town and Stockholm, and brings together social data on plant preferences and ecological data on plant patterns gathered in both locations under two different projects. Overall, responses from social surveys of preferences suggest that people actively select for a variety of different plant traits in the urban environment, and have a multitude of reasons for selecting the plants that they do, related both to qualities of the plants themselves, as well as broader external factors at multiple scales. Vegetation surveys of plant patterns suggest that trait preferences may be inscribed by people in the landscape, though to differing degrees. Using traits as an approach to link ecological elements to social values exhibits advantages in that traits are a spatial unit that is easily understood by citizens and environmental managers. However, it presents limitations in terms of scale, as traits are most useful in connecting to pin-point characteristics in the landscape, and social values associated with broader scales may be overlooked. Collectively, however, the papers in this thesis suggest that traits may serve as one useful approach for discerning human values in the urban landscape, and can be used as indicators of social function. In management applications, particular traits can be incorporated into landscaping interventions to provide for urban areas of greater social meaning. In this way, traits may serve as one tool within the evolving toolbox of social-ecological system study, and thus can contribute to future urban landscapes that exhibit robust social and ecological function.
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