Abstract

Green areas in and around the city have often been used by urban inhabitants as a source of food and timber, for recreation, cultural and aesthetic purposes, or as a source of fresh air and other health benefits. More recently, their hazard regulating functions are increasingly valued and acknowledged as a desirable strategy goal to reduce risk to climatic and hydro-meteorological hazards. However, this often generate tradeoffs. Most of the literature on ecosystem services’ tradeoffs has concentrated on provisioning versus cultural and regulating services. The potential tradeoffs arising between managing nature for recreational, spiritual, mental benefits and for hazard regulating functions in urban and peri-urban areas have rarely been explored. In this paper we assess cultural and regulating services in the Carmel peri-urban forest of Haifa (Israel) using participatory mapping GIS-based methods. We interview local stakeholders and users of the Carmel peri-urban forest area. We explore tradeoffs between cultural and regulating services (in particular for fire mitigation) and we link these tradeoffs to different understanding and uses of nature. We find that the stakeholders preferences for cultural purposes and the preservation of the forest often clashes and increases hazard and fire risk. The idea of a cultivated forest landscape has in fact emerged as a strong cultural ecosystem service in Israel, while the transformation of the forest from a less cultivated type improves regulating services, reduces especially fire risk. We conclude that the tradeoffs between cultural and regulating services are a potential measure of hazard risk.

Highlights

  • Urban areas worldwide tend to suffer from a greater number of fatalities and higher economic losses from natural hazards when compared to their rural counterparts

  • We look at the social construction of risk of forest fires through the lens of the tradeoffs between cultural and regulating services in the context of the 2016 forest fire that affected the city of Haifa

  • The main reason given by the respondents to why they visit the green areas of Haifa was the appreciation of being in nature while at the same time being so close to the city

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Summary

Introduction

Urban areas worldwide tend to suffer from a greater number of fatalities and higher economic losses from natural hazards when compared to their rural counterparts This is mainly due to the concentration of people, infrastructures and assets in cities, as well as to potentially inadequate management and urban planning with regard to hazard risks (Dickson et al 2012). As the human population increasingly concentrate cities, these have expanded into hazard prone areas, leading to an overall increase in exposure to hazard risk (UNDESA 2014; UNISDR 2015) These processes have led some to speak of an “urbanization of disasters” worldwide (McClean 2010). These trends are further accentuated by the increase of the vegetation’s combustibility happening due to climatic change in Mediterranean climate regions (Bradshaw et al 2011)

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