Nature’s contribution to people provided by pastoral systems across European, African, and Middle East Mediterranean countries: trends, approaches and gaps

Author

Dean, Graeme

Francioni, Matteo

Toderi, Marco

López‑i‑Gelats, Feliu

Trozzo, Laura

Rivera‑Ferre, Marta G.

Franca, Antonello

Altana, Giovanni M.

Karatassiou, Maria

Parissi, Zoi M.

Abraham, Eleni M.

Ragkos, Athanasios

Tolunay, Ahmet

Türkoğlu, Türkay

Tarhouni, Mohamed

Tlili, Abderrazak

Abbas, Khaled

Nori, Michele

Varela, Elsa

Lecegui Perepérez, Antonio

Kyriazopoulos, Apostolos P.

D’Ottavio, Paride

Publication date

2024-05-15



Abstract

Mediterranean pastoral systems are providers of a wide array of Nature’s Contribution to People (NCP). They are ‘complex systems’ characterized by limited resources and socio-economic dynamics currently threatened by climate and social changes. Despite a growing number of scientifc articles dealing with NCP, there is a high risk that the existing literature has left out the complexity of such systems. In the light of ongoing social, economic, and climatic changes in the Mediterranean basin, neglecting the complexity of pastoral systems can lead to signifcant research biases, missing the priorities afecting the stability and continuity of such systems. A combination of frameworks of analysis provided by the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment and by the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services was applied to understand if and to what extent the complexity of Mediterranean pastoral systems has been considered in the available literature. Most of the 126 papers report studies conducted in the European Union zone (102 papers), with the majority in Spain (50). Fewer studies have been conducted in the Middle East (15 papers) and Africa zones (9 papers). Despite results confrming the importance of pastoral systems as providers of NCP, most of the eligible papers focused on regulating NCP. A lack of a multisectoral approach and integration of knowledge suggests that the complexity of Mediterranean pastoral systems has been overlooked by researchers. The creation of ‘hybrid knowledge’ bridging the expertise of diferent stakeholders could be the key ingredient to properly address the complexity of Mediterranean pastoral systems.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

CDU Subject

33 - Economics. Economic science

Pages

19

Publisher

Springer

Version of

Regional Environmental Change

Grant Agreement Number

EC/FP7/609475/EU/EURO-MEDITERRANEAN Cooperation through ERANET joint activities and beyond/ERANETMED

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Attribution 4.0 International

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