Abstract

We take a social-ecological systems perspective to investigate the linkages between ecosystem services and human well-being in South Africa. A recent paper identified different types of social-ecological systems in the country, based on distinct bundles of ecosystem service use. These system types were found to represent increasingly weak direct feedbacks between nature and people, from rural “green-loop” communities to urban “red-loop” societies. Here we construct human well-being bundles and explore whether the well-being bundles can be used to identify the same social-ecological system types that were identified using bundles of ecosystem service use. Based on national census data, we found three distinct well-being bundle types that are mainly characterized by differences in income, unemployment and property ownership. The distribution of these well-being bundles approximates the distribution of ecosystem service use bundles to a substantial degree: High levels of income and education generally coincided with areas characterised by low levels of direct ecosystem service use (or red-loop systems), while the majority of low well-being areas coincided with medium and high levels of direct ecosystem service use (or transition and green-loop systems). However, our results indicate that transformations from green-loop to red-loop systems do not always entail an immediate improvement in well-being, which we suggest may be due to a time lag between changes in the different system components. Using human well-being bundles as an indicator of social-ecological dynamics may be useful in other contexts since it is based on socio-economic data commonly collected by governments, and provides important insights into the connections between ecosystem services and human well-being at policy-relevant sub-national scales.

Highlights

  • Human well-being is dependent on ecosystems for provisioning and regulating services like food, clean drinking water, and protection from hazards such as floods, as well as culturalPLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0163476 October 3, 2016Patterns of Human Well-Being and Ecosystem Service Use Bundles households, as well an annual household income, education and unemployment levels, and property ownership percentages can be found for South Africa’s municipalities

  • A cluster analysis of the municipalities based on their values for the five human well-being indicators resulted in three distinct types of well-being bundles (Fig 2)

  • The human well-being bundles identified in this study represent a novel approach to mapping well-being, and illustrate that well-being across South Africa is differentiated and nuanced in a way that may be missed by single well-being indicators or composite indices that mask diversity between well-being constituents

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Summary

Introduction

Human well-being is dependent on ecosystems for provisioning and regulating services like food, clean drinking water, and protection from hazards such as floods, as well as culturalPLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0163476 October 3, 2016Patterns of Human Well-Being and Ecosystem Service Use Bundles households, as well an annual household income, education and unemployment levels, and property ownership percentages can be found for South Africa’s municipalities. The direct web address for the SuperWEB2 database is: [http://interactive. Login is not required - all data is accessible under the "Guest" login. Users can find agricultural data and mortality data. These data are a 10% sample of the census, but can be weighted to be representative of the total census at the municipal level. Again, no login is required ("guests" login is sufficient to access the data instructions are clearly provided on the site). The direct web address for Nesstar is: [http:// interactive.statssa.gov.za:8282/webview/]. StatsSA can be contacted directly for any data that users are not managing to download from the online databases (for technical reasons, for example)

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