Abstract

Wild plants from seminatural habitats (meadows, pastures, shrubland, etc) provide numerous ecosystem services (ESs). However, because of land abandonment and reforestation processes, these habitats and the ESs provided by them are declining. The aim of this study was to identify how local people benefit from collecting wild plants from seminatural habitats, in order to link the identified ESs with conservation practices. The research was based on a survey of 85 inhabitants of the Pieniny Mountains (Poland). The results showed that 89% of respondents regularly collected wild plants from seminatural habitats for different reasons. The most common ESs gained from this activity were natural medicine, direct consumption, and food. Furthermore, particular species have crucial meaning for some ESs, such as direct consumption, food, natural medicine, and cosmetic purposes. For others, such as decoration, ritual purposes, or forage, only specific parts or types of plants, such as flowers, herbs, or grasses, are desirable, regardless of species. In terms of households, 38% used ESs from seminatural habitats as an additional source of livelihood. Promoting engagement in activities more adapted to the current economic situation (eg ecotourism and selling processed wild plant products) may be a good solution for using wild plants more profitably (serving as a basis for livelihood), combined with grassland conservation.

Highlights

  • Wild plant and animal products are provisioning ecosystem services (ESs) according to the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005)

  • ESs provided by wild plants may foster the development of ecotourism; for example, traditional cuisine based on wild plants may serve as a tourism product (Łuczaj et al 2012; Derek 2021)

  • The results showed that particular species had crucial meaning only in the provision of some ESs related to collecting plants

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Summary

Introduction

Wild plant and animal products are provisioning ecosystem services (ESs) according to the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005). In the Pieniny Mountains, there are several groups of such plant communities, including swamps (reed swamps, sedge swamps, and swamp meadows), moist or mesic hay meadows, pastures, grazed or mowed xerothermic grasslands, herbaceous communities, heaths, roadside verges, shrubby communities, glade vegetation, and forest edges (Kazmierczakowa and Pancer-Koteja 2004). Because of their species richness, typical species in these communities provide a range of ESs that may support livelihoods (Ho€nigovaet al 2012). As a result of socioeconomic transformations leading to land abandonment and reforestation processes, which have been rapid in Central and Eastern Europe, mountain grasslands and other seminatural communities are some of Mountain Research and Development Vol 42 No 1 Feb 2022: R11–R19

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