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Provedor de dados:  Ecology and Society
País:  Canada
Título:  A mixed-methods analysis of social-ecological feedbacks between urbanization and forest persistence
Autores:  BenDor, Todd; University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; bendor@unc.edu
Shoemaker, Douglas A.; North Carolina State University; douglas.shoemaker@gmail.com
Thill, Jean-Claude; University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Jean-Claude.Thill@uncc.edu
Dorning, Monica A.; North Carolina State University; madorning@gmail.com
Meentemeyer, Ross K.; North Carolina State University; ross_meentemeyer@ncsu.edu
Data:  2014-07-14
Ano:  2014
Palavras-chave:  Forest persistence
Land-use change
Social-ecological feedbacks
Tax policy
Urban forests
Urbanization
Resumo:  We examined how social-ecological factors in the land-change decision-making process influenced neighboring decisions and trajectories of alternative landscape ecologies. We decomposed individual landowner decisions to conserve or develop forests in the rapidly growing Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S. region, exposing and quantifying the effects of forest quality, and social and cultural dynamics. We tested the hypothesis that the intrinsic value of forest resources, e.g., cultural attachment to land, influence woodland owners’ propensity to sell. Data were collected from a sample of urban, nonindustrial private forest (U-NIPF) owners using an individualized survey design that spatially matched land-owner responses to the ecological and timber values of their forest stands. Cluster analysis (n = 126) revealed four woodland owner typologies with widely ranging views on the ecosystem, cultural, and historical values of their forests. Classification tree analysis revealed woodland owners’ willingness to sell was characterized by nonlinear, interactive factors, including sense of place values regarding the retention of native vegetation, the size of forest holdings, their connectedness to nature, ‘pressure’ from surrounding development, and behavioral patterns, such as how often landowners visit their land. Several ecological values and economic factors were not found to figure in the decision to retain forests. Our study design is unique in that we address metropolitan forest persistence across urban-rural and population gradients using a unique individualized survey design that richly contextualizes survey responses. Understanding the interplay between policies and landowner behavior can also help resource managers to better manage and promote forest persistence. Given the region’s paucity of policy tools to manage the type and amount of development, the mosaic of land cover the region currently enjoys is far from stable.
Tipo:  Peer-Reviewed Insight
Idioma:  Inglês
Identificador:  vol19/iss3/art3/
Editor:  Resilience Alliance
Formato:  text/html application/pdf
Fonte:  Ecology and Society; Vol. 19, No. 3 (2014)
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