Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The term “cultural ecosystem services” is defined within a wider framework of ecosystem services as “non-material benefits that people obtain from ecosystems through spiritual enrichment, cognitive development, reflection, recreation and aesthetic experience” (MA 2005).
CES differ from other ecosystem services as they encompass intangible and non-material benefits, primarily manifested in cultural identity, aesthetic value, education and research, and community ...
Cultural services are an ecosystem’s contribution to the non-material benefits (e.g. capabilities and experiences) that arise from human-ecosystem relationships. The categories of CES are: Subsistence
The cultural ecosystem services (CES) idea is seen simultaneously as a welcoming, expansive addition to conservation policy-making and as a strange, square-peg-in-a-round-hole concept that should be replaced by a more appropriate metaphor or conceptual structure.
Cultural ecosystem services constitute a growing field of research that is characterized by an increasing number of publications from various academic disciplines. We conducted a semiquantitative review of publications explicitly dealing with cultural ecosystem services.
Cultural ecosystem services can be defined as the non-material benefits that people obtain from nature, including spiritual, aesthetical, educational and recreational values (Ament et al., 2016, Plieninger et al., 2015, Schaich et al., 2010).
This research focuses on cultural ecosystem services, a significant and often underexplored aspect of urban parks, with a particular emphasis on their impact on the well-being of park users in culturally significant spaces like thematic theater parks. Shano Park in Marivan, the world's first open-air theater park, was selected as the study area
Yet, our understanding of the cultural ecosystem services (CES) provided by wetlands remains limited, with benefits often only recognised at local scales. To address this knowledge gap, we conducted a global systematic review of wetland CES. Our synthesis addressed key questions related to the provision of CES by different types of wetlands ...
Cultural ecosystem services (CES) are non-material intangible benefits that humans derive from ecosystems, which are indispensable for the well-being of communities and directly influence the quality of life.
Cultural ecosystem services (CES), usually defined as the intangible and nonmaterial benefits ecosystems provide, have been relatively neglected by researchers and policy-makers compared to provisioning, supporting, and regulating services.