Abstract

Conservation policy frequently assumes that increasing people’s exposure to green-space enhances their knowledge of the natural world and desire to protect it. Urban development is, however, considered to be driving declining connectedness to nature. Despite this the evidence base supporting the assumption that visiting green-spaces promotes biodiversity knowledge and conservation support, and the impacts of urbanization on these relationships, is surprisingly limited. Using data from door-to-door surveys of nearly 300 residents in three pairs of small and large urban areas in England we demonstrate that people who visit green-space more regularly have higher biodiversity knowledge and support for conservation (measured using scales of pro-environmental behavior). Crucially these relationships only arise when considering visits to the countryside and not the frequency of visits to urban green-space. These patterns are robust to a suite of confounding variables including nature orientated motivations for visiting green-space, socio-economic and demographic factors, garden-use and engagement with natural history programs. Despite this the correlations that we uncover cannot unambiguously demonstrate that visiting the countryside improves biodiversity knowledge and conservation support. We consider it likely, however, that two mechanisms operate through a positive feedback loop i.e. increased visits to green-space promote an interest in and knowledge of biodiversity and support for conservation, which in turn further increase the desire to visit green-space and experience nature. The intensity of urbanization around peoples’ homes, but not city size, is negatively associated with their frequency of countryside visits and biodiversity knowledge. Designing less intensely urbanized cities with good access to the countryside, combined with conservation policies that promote access to the countryside thus seems likely to maximize urban residents’ biodiversity knowledge and support for conservation.

Highlights

  • Conservation biologists have long assumed that engagement with the natural world increases understanding and knowledge of biodiversity, and willingness to protect it [1, 2]

  • We find that many urban residents in the UK visit green-space infrequently, which is compatible with previous studies [23, 36]

  • Our results offer some support to claims that studies reporting poor biodiversity knowledge are influenced by focusing on precise scientific knowledge rather than more general constructs and understanding of ecological processes [12, 13] further work is required to determine exactly how participants judge habitat quality to confirm this

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Summary

Introduction

Conservation biologists have long assumed that engagement with the natural world increases understanding and knowledge of biodiversity, and willingness to protect it [1, 2]. BESS is a six year program (2011–2017) funded by the UK Natural Environment Research Council (http:// www.nerc.ac.uk/) and the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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