4.5 Article

Not too small to benefit society: insights into perceived cultural ecosystemservices of mountain lakes in the European Alps

Journal

ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY
Volume 27, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

Resilience Alliance
DOI: 10.5751/ES-12987-270106

Keywords

group differences; mountain regions; nature's contributions to people; perception survey; subjective well-being; trade-offs

Funding

  1. Austrian Federal Ministry of Education, Science and Research

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This study collected and analyzed people's perceptions of various cultural ecosystem services (CES) related to mountain lakes using an online questionnaire. The results show that bequest, symbolic, aesthetic, and spiritual values are perceived as most important, while crowdness, noisiness, and garbage are the most mentioned pressures. The findings provide valuable insights for research, decision making, and policy formulation related to mountain lakes.
Although the importance of lakes for providing cultural ecosystem services (CES) is widely recognized, the integrationof associated values and benefits in decision making is still underdeveloped. Therefore, this study aimed at collecting and analyzingpeople's perceptions related to various CES of mountain lakes using an online questionnaire. We thereby distinguished societal valuesin terms of CES from individual experiences that contribute to subjective well-being and elicited perceived pressures reducing thequality of nature-based experiences. Based on 526 responses, our results indicate that bequest, symbolic, aesthetic, and spiritual valuesare perceived as most important, while representation and entertainment were less important. Accordingly, experiences such asconnection to nature, relaxation, and freedom had the highest values. In terms of pressures, crowdedness was mentioned most often,followed by noisiness and garbage. These pressures mostly affected experiences such as connection to nature, freedom, relaxation,peace, and memories, with negative effects also on CES, mainly on aesthetic value, sense of place, existence value, and symbolic value.In general, the perceptions were highly consistent across different socio-cultural groups. Nevertheless, some differences emerged betweengroups with different cultural backgrounds with respect to CES and pressures, while differences in experiences were mostly related togender. Our findings advance the understanding of CES related to mountain lakes and provide useful insights for research as well asdecision and policy making, emphasizing the high intrinsic value expressed by the respondents as well as the variety of CES andexperiences associated with mountain lakes. Moreover, the identified pressures provide a valuable basis for consideration in tourismmanagement, the protection of natural resources, and sustainable development because they advance our understanding of howinfrastructure development and socioeconomic changes may aggravate impacts on societal values and individual experiences.

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