Expanding the Role of Biodiversity in Laypeople’s Lives: The View of Communicators
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Connecting People and Biodiversity
1.2. Aim of the Study and Research Questions
- (1)
- How do biodiversity communicators perceive the current role of biodiversity in Dutch laypeople’s lives?
- (2)
- How do biodiversity communicators perceive the desired role of biodiversity in Dutch laypeople’s lives?
- (3)
- According to biodiversity communicators, which potential is present for expanding the role of biodiversity in laypeople’s lives in The Netherlands?
- (4)
- What are best practices in communicating biodiversity amongst Dutch biodiversity communicators?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Selection of Participants
2.2. Instrument
- the role of biodiversity in the profession and personal life of the interviewee
- the role of biodiversity in the lives of Dutch laypeople, as perceived by the interviewee
- potential to expand the role of biodiversity in Dutch laypeople’s lives, as perceived by the interviewee.
2.3. Conducting the Interviews
2.4. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Theme 1: Current Role of Biodiversity in Laypeople’s Lives
3.1.1. Lack of Knowledge
I thought that they would start shouting ‘COOT!’ (laughs) That did not happen. And then (…) hesitantly, you know: “grebe?”(John)
Actually, not one tree or plant is native there, they are all exotic. But their experience is totally awesome: “The nature on Hawaii is marvellous!” That is what people tell you, while my heart aches as I’m walking there.(Shane)
They rush past those bright green deserts thinking: “oh yes, those are meadows”. But that is not true. Those bright green fields, that is all just desert. An ecological disaster zone.(Julia)
3.1.2. Ambivalent Attitudes
There are many people who say: "you know, we shouldn’t aim to turn cities into nature reserves. There are nature reserves and there are cities, and there is countryside. Countryside that’s where potatoes should be harvested, cities are where people drive around or get stuck in traffic, and nature reserves, that’s where deer roam and birds sing.”(Oliver)
A tree is for providing shade, a tree is not for insects or for birds. And parks exist because you want to be able to walk somewhere (…) It is more like a décor. (…) That it’s a tree that constitutes a living community of insects and herbivores and fungi, most people are not aware of that and therefore do not appreciate that. (….) I think that’s a great shame, because people no longer see the dynamics and the interesting phenomena.(Dale)
One day they feed pigeons and the other day they say "they shit on everything". (…) Once (pigeons) are called “flying rats” and then again they are "so beautiful”, and then they take a picture of the bridge together with those pigeons, and say "the city is such a beautiful place".(Oliver)
3.2. Theme 2: Desired Role of Biodiversity in Laypeople’s Lives
I think the world around us is so fascinatingly beautiful. I really can’t understand that so many people are so indifferent about it. I think that it’s a shame, because I think it can enrich your life.(Rick)
3.2.1. Basic Knowledge and Awareness
Being aware that your life and the life of all those plants and animals are connected in a certain way, and that you have an impact on those other species, and vice versa they also have an impact on you, I think that that realization is important, that you understand that you cannot completely shut yourself off from that.(Oliver)
Children must know the difference between a frog and a toad. I seriously think that that’s important. And that you know that it’s a cold-blooded animal. And of course that you have mammals…How many adults would call a deer “roe”. Honestly, that makes my hair stand up on the back of my neck.(Julia)
Whether you know that a grebe is called a grebe, I find that less interesting than its behavior.(Amy)
I think it is strange when you sit in your garden and you do not recognize a red admiral that flies past you, while you do know the name of a butterfly in Brazil. Well, it shouldn’t be like that. First you should know what you have in your own country, and only then what is on offer abroad.(Lori)
3.2.2. Value of Biodiversity Knowledge
Incomprehensible how people went diving in the Grevelingen without knowing species. At least, that is really not fun! The water is cold, cloudy…In order to have fun diving there you need to recognize that small sea squirt, and that anemone, and thus also all that little stuff.(John)
Just knowing that a tiger is living somewhere, (…) even if you don’t see it, is sufficient for me. So the knowing is very important.(John)
If you don’t know at all that it exists, then you don’t see it. You will just cycle past two grebes in courting display, but you won’t realize it. But if you know it exists, then you notice it, and then you probably also like to see and recognize things.(Amy)
Suppose you know five species of trees (…) only then will you see “Damn it, that is not an elm, that must be something else. So what is it then?" You are only going to wonder about that if you already know those five.(John)
3.3. Theme 3: Potential to Expand the Role of Biodiversity in Dutch Laypeople’s Lives
3.3.1. Potential of Direct Experience with Available Biodiversity
I think that the opportunities are huge in the Netherlands. (…) There is no country in the world with such rich biodiversity…for we are and will always be the river delta of Europe. So it is just one large, wet mess here. And we know that, but we don’t realize how cool that is. Because we like to see impressive mountains, but how rich is biodiversity there? Here biodiversity is rich, due to that soggy mess. That’s why we have so many species.(Julia)
Nature doesn’t start at a nature reserve. (…) Nature starts right outside your front door. (…) There are always lichens on the pavement.(Julia)
I sometimes tell an audience, when I give a lecture: “You don’t need to watch television. If you have a nice, good garden, a soap opera will be performed right in front of you. That just happens, at least when you see it, when you pay attention to it”.(Rick)
What you notice is that at the drawing table, when the plan is actually designed, there is never an ecologist, but always a landscape architect. And landscape architects love cultivated trees, (…) they love sleek design, neat little rows…(Shane)
If we continue with the current vision on shaping and building cities, then indeed there is a substantially lower proportion of the Dutch population for which potential will exist to open their eyes.(Rick)
3.3.2. Potential of the Media
Of course you have got the BBC. And now the Netherlands of course is also starting to make fantastic nature films…And the children here who are allowed to frequently watch nature films, well, you just notice that, they know a lot.(Lori)
One big bright green plain. With a small hill. Then there is one flower there, and there is one flower there. (…) As such it is actually already indoctrinated: a meadow looks uniformly green.(Julia)
3.3.3. Potential of Education
If I were to set priorities, then knowledge about nature would rank relatively low I’m afraid, because I think those other things are also very important to them.(Amy)
So I thought “they are going to catch bumblebees”. Well that was out of the question according to the school, (…) because “there could be someone allergic to bee stings and bees are dangerous, they sting”. I wonder: how will those children grow up? Please allow them to discover things!(Dale)
3.4. Theme 4: Best Practices in Communicating Biodiversity amongst Dutch Biodiversity Communicators
3.4.1. Choosing the Right Examples
Something which is commonplace can very well be a discovery for someone who has never been made aware of it. So when you point out to people such small everyday findings in their own environment, then this will enrich their daily experience.(Oliver)
First have a look at plants, because those you can see anytime and anywhere, and you can name them. (…) When you only look at birds, then you could return home with “it failed”, and with plants you never have that.(John)
The tiger: fantastic predator. Catches prey three times as heavy as itself. But we have the weasel, and it catches prey twenty times as heavy as itself.(John)
You may point at twenty bird species, but then most of it passes you by. But if you nicely elaborate on just one, so that they really get to know the species, and you talk to those people again weeks later, they say: “Yes, I now see song thrushes everywhere”, or “I see dunnocks everywhere”. (…) Suddenly they see it. It had always been there. Yet now it has obtained meaning.(Oliver)
3.4.2. Connecting with the Target Group
Farmers who are interested in nature often are because they like birds, such as meadow birds. And that is then your opening. (…) I always try to connect to the question of the specific person (…). So if I know that you like birds, then I will sketch the importance of insects from the perspective of birds, whereas if I talk to a manager who really loves a specific butterfly - they too exist - then I use that perspective.(Rick)
3.4.3. Translation of Biodiversity
Every animal should have its name. So if you want to communicate, then “bird” or “insect” is unsatisfactory, “dragonfly” or “butterfly” is also unsatisfactory, yet a “swallowtail” is okay - you know. And I do that intuitively.(John)
If you have a scale from one to five, everybody understands that if you score a one, you simply score below par. Yet if you would say “I have a roadside here and there are ten types of plants and five types of insects” nobody or only a few people will grasp that that is actually very few.(Rick)
4. Discussion
4.1. Current Role of Biodiversity in Dutch Laypeople’s Lives
4.2. Desired Role of Biodiversity in Dutch Laypeople’s Lives
4.3. Potential to Expand the Tole of Biodiversity in Dutch Laypeople’s Lives
4.4. Best Practices in Communicating Biodiversity amongst Dutch Biodiversity Communicators
4.5. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Participant | Age | Profession | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Dale | 62 | Project leader Natural History Institute; member of municipality committees about greenspace |
2 | Julia | 42 | Self-employed park ranger and nature communicator; initiator people-nature connection project |
3 | Shane | 36 | Ecological consultant |
4 | Lori | 56 | Primary school teacher |
5 | Oliver | 39 | Urban ecologist and media communications officer; chairman bird shelter |
6 | Tara | 42 | Urban ecologist and ecological advisor |
7 | Helen | 44 | Coordinator of funding related to biodiversity; initiator neighborhood nature garden |
8 | Matt | 64 | Editor-in-chief at a zoo; chairman natural city park |
9 | Carol | 65 | Nature guide/nature educator |
10 | Rick | 28 | Project manager nature conservation organization |
11 | Amy | 36 | High school teacher (biology-related subjects) and PhD-student |
12 | John | 58 | Self-employed writer/text-editor, writing mainly about biodiversity |
Code Nr. | Code Title | Description (References Made by the Interviewee to…) |
---|---|---|
Theme 1: Current role of biodiversity in laypeople’s lives | ||
1 | Laypeople_role | …the role that biodiversity plays in the lives of laypeople and his/her thoughts and/or feelings about this. |
Theme 2: Desired role of biodiversity in laypeople’s lives | ||
2 | Laypeople_role_should | …the role that biodiversity should or would not need to play in the lives of laypeople. |
3 | Laypeople_role_important_why | …why the role that biodiversity plays in the lives of laypeople is important or not important (e.g., the link between knowledge-interest-affinities). |
4 | Prof_role_personal | …the role that biodiversity currently plays in his/her personal life. |
5 | Prof_motivation_aims | …his/her goals, aims and motivations in the profession, including actual outcomes. |
Theme 3: Potential to expand the role of biodiversity in Dutch laypeople’s lives | ||
6 | Expanded_prof | …when, where and/or how the role that biodiversity plays in his/her life expanded/developed. |
7 | Expand_lay_opportunities | …potential opportunities in the Netherlands for laypeople to develop/expand the role that biodiversity plays in their lives; excluding those in the profession of the participant (= Code 10) and media (= Code 9). |
8 | Expand_lay_barriers | …potential challenges/barriers for laypeople to develop/expand the role that biodiversity plays in their lives; excluding those specifically experienced in the profession of the participant (= Code 10) and media (= Code 9). |
9 | Expand_media | …the influences of the media on the role that biodiversity plays in laypeople’s lives, including their potential in expanding/developing it. |
Theme 4: Best practices in communicating biodiversity amongst Dutch biodiversity communicators | ||
10 | Prof_com_how | …effective or non-effective ways of communication related to biodiversity in the profession, i.e., what does or does not work or should be kept into account. |
11 | Prof_com_how_challenge | …potential challenges/barriers experienced in communication related to biodiversity in the profession. |
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Hooykaas, M.J.D.; Schilthuizen, M.; Smeets, I. Expanding the Role of Biodiversity in Laypeople’s Lives: The View of Communicators. Sustainability 2020, 12, 2768. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12072768
Hooykaas MJD, Schilthuizen M, Smeets I. Expanding the Role of Biodiversity in Laypeople’s Lives: The View of Communicators. Sustainability. 2020; 12(7):2768. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12072768
Chicago/Turabian StyleHooykaas, Michiel J. D., Menno Schilthuizen, and Ionica Smeets. 2020. "Expanding the Role of Biodiversity in Laypeople’s Lives: The View of Communicators" Sustainability 12, no. 7: 2768. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12072768
APA StyleHooykaas, M. J. D., Schilthuizen, M., & Smeets, I. (2020). Expanding the Role of Biodiversity in Laypeople’s Lives: The View of Communicators. Sustainability, 12(7), 2768. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12072768