| Literature DB >> 31437193 |
Graham Coker1, Mathis Richard2, Karen Bayne1, Simeon Smaill1, Loretta Garrett3, Amanda Matson3, Steven Wakelin1,4.
Abstract
The goal of this study was to determine if there were differences among stakeholders in the values they attribute to soil ecosystem services from plantation forests in New Zealand. Groups of forest-associated stakeholders were identified (e.g. land owners, forest owners, wood processors, and recreational forest users) and surveyed to assess their cultural background (indigenous New Zealand Māori or not) and then the relative importance they placed on 10 forest soil ecosystem services. Across all survey respondents, very high importance was placed on the ability of soils to sustain forest growth across multiple plantings/rotations (sustainable production). Interestingly, this was more highly valued than maximising short-term production. Māori placed greater importance on forest ecosystem resilience, provenance and kaitiakitanga (sensu stewardship of resources), water quality, and harvest of food and/or medicines from forests than non-Māori. These results demonstrate inherent cultural differences in valuing the range of forest ecosystem services that soils support. It is important that cultural views are understood and integrated into future soil health testing schemes to reflect the needs of all stakeholders. Ultimately, this work will help increase the sustainability of planted forest ecosystems in New Zealand, ensure the forestry sectors social licence to operate, and add value to forest products by demonstrating environmental and cultural stewardship of forest products.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31437193 PMCID: PMC6705829 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0221291
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Summary PERMANOVA testing for similarity in responses, among stakeholders and Māori, for overall similarity in responses to the quantification of importance of 10 soil ecosystem services in planted forest ecosystems.
| Source | Pseudo F | p(perm) | √CV |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stakeholder | 1.882 | 0.006 | 13.80 |
| Māori v other | 7.908 | 0.001 | 35.02 |
| Residual | 64.77 |
a p(perm) is the p-value derived from permutation (999 times) based testing.
b √CV = is the square-root of the component of variation, a measure of the effect size for each component in the analysis.
c Stakeholder = forest owners, wood producers etc. See full description in the main text.
Fig 1(A) Sum of top 3 ranked forest soil ecosystem services, across all stakeholder groups, and (B) separated into Māori and non-Māori survey respondents.
Data were weighted such that 1st ranked was scored ‘3’, 2nd ranked ‘2’, and 3rd ranked ‘1’. For Fig 1B, the average value and ‘whiskers’ extending from the 5–95 percentiles are given. When too few data are available to calculate the 25th to 75th percentiles (i.e. the extent of the box) a single line presenting the data/datum range is provided.
Summary Wilcoxon signed-rank testing to determine if Māori and non-Māori survey respondents differed in their ranking of importance of forest soil ecosystem services.
| Forest soil ecosystem function | Wilcoxon rank | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| Drinkable forest streams | 604 | 0.021 |
| Provenance and kaitiakitanga | 641 | <0.001 |
| Harvest of food and medicine | 690 | <0.001 |
| Controlling pests and diseases | 869 | 0.630 |
| Achieving sustainable production | 1072 | 0.277 |
| Preserving soil biodiversity | 1154 | 0.053 |
| Resilient forest ecosystems | 1221 | 0.031 |
| Storing soil carbon | 1099 | 0.069 |
| Maximising production | 1148 | 0.056 |
Fig 2Top 3 forest soil ecosystem services as ranked by different stakeholders.
Results were weighted such that the most important (1st ranked) received a value 3, 2nd ranked a value of 1, and 3rd ranked a value of 1. Numbers of respondents for each stakeholder are given in plot (h). Data are presented as scatter dot plots, with mean value on the horizontal bar and SEM on the error bars.