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Species richness alone does not predict cultural ecosystem service value

Rose A. Graves, Scott M. Pearson, and Monica G. Turner
PNAS April 4, 2017 114 (14) 3774-3779; published ahead of print March 20, 2017 https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1701370114
Rose A. Graves
aDepartment of Zoology, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, WI 53706;
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  • For correspondence: turnermg@wisc.eduragraves@wisc.edu
Scott M. Pearson
bDepartment of Natural Sciences, Mars Hill University, Mars Hill, NC 28754
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Monica G. Turner
aDepartment of Zoology, University of Wisconsin–Madison, Madison, WI 53706;
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  • For correspondence: turnermg@wisc.eduragraves@wisc.edu
  1. Contributed by Monica G. Turner, February 3, 2017 (sent for review November 14, 2016; reviewed by Gretchen C. Daily and Emily Minor)

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Significance

Sustaining biodiversity and ecosystem services are common conservation goals. However, understanding relationships between biodiversity and cultural ecosystem services (CES) and determining the best indicators to represent CES remain crucial challenges. We combined ecological and social data to compare CES value of wildflower communities based on observed species richness versus revealed social preferences. Using a discrete-choice experiment with images of wildflower communities, we analyzed which aspects of biodiversity were associated with the aesthetic preferences of forest visitors. Although commonly used to indicate biodiversity-based CES, species richness did not predict aesthetic preference. This study suggests that successful management of CES requires understanding stakeholders’ preferences to determine conservation priorities.

Abstract

Many biodiversity-ecosystem services studies omit cultural ecosystem services (CES) or use species richness as a proxy and assume that more species confer greater CES value. We studied wildflower viewing, a key biodiversity-based CES in amenity-based landscapes, in Southern Appalachian Mountain forests and asked (i) How do aesthetic preferences for wildflower communities vary with components of biodiversity, including species richness?; (ii) How do aesthetic preferences for wildflower communities vary across psychographic groups?; and (iii) How well does species richness perform as an indicator of CES value compared with revealed social preferences for wildflower communities? Public forest visitors (n = 293) were surveyed during the summer of 2015 and asked to choose among images of wildflower communities in which flower species richness, flower abundance, species evenness, color diversity, and presence of charismatic species had been digitally manipulated. Aesthetic preferences among images were unrelated to species richness but increased with more abundant flowers, greater species evenness, and greater color diversity. Aesthetic preferences were consistent across psychographic groups and unaffected by knowledge of local flora or value placed on wildflower viewing. When actual wildflower communities (n = 54) were ranked based on empirically measured flower species richness or wildflower viewing utility based on multinomial logit models of revealed preferences, rankings were broadly similar. However, designation of hotspots (CES values above the median) based on species richness alone missed 27% of wildflower viewing utility hotspots. Thus, conservation priorities for sustaining CES should incorporate social preferences and consider multiple dimensions of biodiversity that underpin CES supply.

  • discrete choice
  • aesthetics
  • biodiversity
  • wildflowers
  • amenity-based landscape

Footnotes

  • ↵1To whom correspondence may be addressed. Email: turnermg{at}wisc.edu or ragraves{at}wisc.edu.
  • Author contributions: R.A.G., S.M.P., and M.G.T. designed research; R.A.G. analyzed data; and R.A.G., S.M.P., and M.G.T. wrote the paper.

  • Reviewers: G.C.D., Stanford University; and E.M., University of Illinois at Chicago.

  • Conflict of interest statement: M.G.T. is a coauthor on a forthcoming paper with Gretchen Daily. This paper is a workshop report and did not involve a research collaboration.

  • This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1701370114/-/DCSupplemental.

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Biodiversity and cultural ecosystem service value
Rose A. Graves, Scott M. Pearson, Monica G. Turner
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Apr 2017, 114 (14) 3774-3779; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1701370114

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Biodiversity and cultural ecosystem service value
Rose A. Graves, Scott M. Pearson, Monica G. Turner
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Apr 2017, 114 (14) 3774-3779; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1701370114
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