Species richness alone does not predict cultural ecosystem service value

Rose A. Graves, Scott M. Pearson, Monica G. Turner

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

86 Scopus citations

Abstract

Many biodiversity-ecosystem services studies omit cultural ecosystem services (CES) or use species richness as a proxy and assume that more species confer greater CES value. We studied wildflower viewing, a key biodiversity-based CES in amenitybased landscapes, in Southern Appalachian Mountain forests and asked (i) How do aesthetic preferences for wildflower communities vary with components of biodiversity, including species richness?; (ii) How do aesthetic preferences for wildflower communities vary across psychographic groups?; and (iii) How well does species richness perform as an indicator of CES value compared with revealed social preferences for wildflower communities? Public forest visitors (n = 293) were surveyed during the summer of 2015 and asked to choose among images of wildflower communities in which flower species richness, flower abundance, species evenness, color diversity, and presence of charismatic species had been digitally manipulated. Aesthetic preferences among images were unrelated to species richness but increased with more abundant flowers, greater species evenness, and greater color diversity. Aesthetic preferences were consistent across psychographic groups and unaffected by knowledge of local flora or value placed on wildflower viewing. When actual wildflower communities (n = 54) were ranked based on empirically measured flower species richness orwildflower viewing utility based on multinomial logit models of revealed preferences, rankings were broadly similar. However, designation of hotspots (CES values above the median) based on species richness alone missed 27%of wildflower viewing utility hotspots. Thus, conservation priorities for sustaining CES should incorporate social preferences and consider multiple dimensions of biodiversity that underpin CES supply.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3774-3779
Number of pages6
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume114
Issue number14
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 4 2017
Externally publishedYes

Funding

We thank B. Beardmore for helpful guidance on study design; G. Daily and E. Minor for constructive suggestions on the manuscript; and A. Mace, E. Damschen, C. Kucharik V. Radeloff, and B. Zuckerberg for helpful comments on early development of these ideas. We also thank the land owners and managers who provided permission for data collection and the many willing survey respondents for their participation. This work was supported by National Science Foundation Long-term Ecological Research Program Grants DEB-0823293 and DEB-1440485 and the University of Wisconsin-Madison Vilas Trust (M.G.T.).

FundersFunder number
University of Wisconsin-Madison Vilas Trust
National Science FoundationDEB-0823293, 1440485, 1637522, DEB-1440485

    Keywords

    • Aesthetics
    • Amenity-based landscape
    • Biodiversity
    • Discrete choice
    • Wildflowers

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