• Author/Authors

    Goddard، نويسنده , , Mark A. and Dougill، نويسنده , , Andrew J. and Benton، نويسنده , , Tim G.، نويسنده ,

  • DocumentNumber
    3542448
  • Title Of Article

    Why garden for wildlife? Social and ecological drivers, motivations and barriers for biodiversity management in residential landscapes

  • شماره ركورد
    6058
  • Latin Abstract
    Residential landscapes with private gardens are major land covers in cities and their sustainable management is paramount for achieving a resilient urban future. Here we focus on the value of residential ecosystems for biodiversity conservation and explore the social and ecological factors that influence wildlife-friendly garden management. Using a stratified sampling design across the UK city of Leeds, this interdisciplinary study develops and applies a mixed method approach, including questionnaires, interviews and ecological surveys across multiple spatial scales. We quantify wildlife-friendly gardening using two measures: (i) the number of wildlife-friendly features within gardens (the wildlife resources index, WRI); and (ii) the frequency of winter bird feeding. Wildlife-friendly gardening is influenced by a combination of garden characteristics and management intensity, householder demographics, wider environmental activity and landscape context. Residents reveal a range of motivations for wildlife-friendly gardening, notably personal well-being and a moral responsibility to nature. Respondents expressed a duty to maintain neighbourhood standards, revealing that social norms are a considerable barrier to uptake of wildlife-friendly activities, but also provide an opportunity where neighbour mimicry results in diffusion of wildlife-friendly practices. Community-driven initiatives that engage, educate and empower residents are better placed to encourage wildlife-friendly gardening than top-down financial incentives.
  • From Page
    258
  • NaturalLanguageKeyword
    Householder decision-making , Sustainable community initiatives , pro-environmental behaviour , Private gardens , Wildlife-friendly gardening , Urban biodiversity
  • JournalTitle
    Studia Iranica
  • To Page
    273
  • To Page
    273