Abstract

The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment proposed four categories of ecosystem services as regulating, provisioning, supporting and cultural. Of these, cultural services have been the most difficult to quantify despite playing a key role in developing society’s supporting services to ecosystems. By reviewing a series of case studies related to the cultural services derived from raptors, we examine relations between tangible ecosystem services and ‘knowledge’ and ‘beliefs’ as part of supporting services from human societies to ecosystems. We identified types of raptor regulating and provisioning services and patterns in service--knowledge-beliefs that defined positive or negative outcomes for raptor conservation. We also demonstrate how possible interactions between physical, experiential, physical-symbolic and representative-symbolic cultural services and between different stakeholders can create incentives or obstacles for conservation. Predictable patterns in service-knowledge-beliefs provide a framework upon which socio-cultural and ethnobiological aspects of raptor conservation may be combined with ecological research to support conservation initiatives. Based on these patterns we present examples of how cultural services might be employed to better promote raptor conservation while respecting the beliefs and traditions of stakeholders.

Highlights

  • Diverse animal, plant and microbial communities are vital for the proper functioning of natural ecosystems [1,2]

  • We developed a framework related to services, knowledge and beliefs from which to approach the investigation of cases from a perspective of cultural services

  • Using combinations of search phrases that included ‘raptors’, ‘birds of prey’ or the different types of bird of prey (e.g., ‘hawk’, ‘eagle’, ‘kite’, ‘owl’, ‘vulture’, etc.) and words and phrases associated with cultural services, such as ‘cultural service’, ‘iconic’, ‘charismatic’, ‘belief’, ‘attitude’, ‘perception’, ‘religion’, ‘culture’, ‘education’, ‘tourism’ or ‘citizen science’, we retrieved 236 articles and reports

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Summary

Introduction

Plant and microbial communities are vital for the proper functioning of natural ecosystems [1,2]. Among the four categories of ecosystem services, three (i.e., provisioning, regulating and supporting) are closely linked to biodiversity’s functions in natural ecosystems; cultural services are somewhat unique as these are regarded as entirely linked to human societies and to a human ‘appreciation’ of biodiversity This makes it difficult to ascribe a monetary value to cultural services. We developed a framework related to services, knowledge and beliefs from which to approach the investigation of cases from a perspective of cultural services We used this framework to categorize case studies and thereby demonstrate how the broad nature (e.g., positive impact, negative impact and negative action) of provisioning and cultural services to different cultures/stakeholders derived from raptor species, may be linked to affect raptor conservation. We identified culturally-related incentives, as well as potential obstacles and their possible remedies, to support the conservation of raptors while respecting cultural beliefs and identities

Review Methods
Valuing Cultural Ecosystem Services
Forming Cultural Perspectives on Biodiversity
Cultural Perspectives on Raptors and the Impact on Conservation
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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