The Cultural Ecosystem Services of Mediterranean Pine Forests

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

Cultural ecosystem services, defined as the intangible benefits that humans derive from ecosystems, are at once self-evident and allusive to define, specifically because they are a function of culture and the interaction between two dynamic systems: human societies and natural ecosystems. Mediterranean pine forests, as a product of millennia of human--nature interactions are therefore an exemplary and challenging case study for assessing cultural services. In this review, I assess cultural ecosystem services supplied by Mediterranean pine and mixed forests. I first expand upon the challenges of assessing cultural ecosystem services, emphasizing the dynamic nature of social-ecological systems and their feedbacks. Cultural service assessments are considered highly context-specific, subject to change with changes in social context, shifts in ecosystem structure and function, and resultant changes in social and ecological interactions. Next, based on a review of the recent literature, I inventory the range of cultural services provided by, and relational values inspired by, pine and mixed-pine forests around the Mediterranean Basin. Then, the case of pine forests in contemporary Israel is used as an example of the challenges of assessing cultural services. I conclude by providing some consistent trends in cultural ecosystem provision, and finally look to the future of cultural service from pine forests, considering forecasted environmental changes in the Mediterranean Basin.
Original languageUndefined/Unknown
Title of host publicationPines and Their Mixed Forest Ecosystems in the Mediterranean Basin
EditorsGidi Ne'eman, Yagil Osem
Place of PublicationCham
Pages631-655
Number of pages25
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2021

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