Earth Observations of Human-Nature Interactions from a Cultural Ecosystem Service Perspective
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/105565Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Vaz, Ana Sofía; Moreno-Llorca, Ricardo; Carvalho-Santos, Cláudia; Cardoso, Ana Sofía; Honrado, João; Cabello, Javier; Alcaraz Segura, DomingoEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Cultural ecosystem services Protected areas Recreation and tourism Satellite remote sensing Social media
Fecha
2022-07-01Referencia bibliográfica
Vaz, A. S., Moreno-Llorca, R., Carvalho-Santos, C., Cardoso, A. S., Honrado, J. P., Cabello, J., & Alcaraz-Segura, D. (2022). Earth Observations of Human-Nature Interactions from a Cultural Ecosystem Service Perspective. Ieva Misiune Daniel Depellegrin, 85.
Patrocinador
AS Vaz was supported by Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (Spain) through the 2018 Juan de la Cierva-Formación program [contract reference FJC2018-038131-I] and by the FCT - Foundation for Science and Technology through Stimulus of Scientific Employment, Individual Support (reference 2020.01175.CEECIND/CP1601/CT0009). AS Cardoso was supported by FCT through a PhD Research Grant (reference 2021.05426.BD). CCarvalho-Santos was supported by the “Contrato-Programa” UIDP/04050/2020 funded by national funds through the Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia I.P. AS Vaz, D Alcaraz-Segura and R Moreno-Llorca acknowledge support from the EarthCul Project (reference PID2020-118041GB-I00), funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation. This chapter contributes to the GEO BON research on ecosystem services.Resumen
Reconciling nature conservation and cultural ecosystem services (CES) has become fundamental to manage mountain protected areas. The timely monitoring of CES opportunities at large scales is therefore a pressing need. We combined social media data and Earth observations (EO) into a multi model inference framework to assess CES opportunities in two contrasting mountain Biosphere Reserves in Southern Europe: Peneda-Gerês (Portugal) and Sierra Nevada (Spain). EO indicators expressing people’s accessibility to leisure elements and landscape visual-sensory characteristics appear to be effective candidates for the monitoring of attributes underlying CES. Our findings recognise EO as complementary tools to socio-cultural approaches for the evaluation of CES, aiding stakeholders in their management decisions focused on the resilience and sustainability of mountain protected areas.





