Rivers and streams in the media: a content analysis of ecosystem services
Although ecosystem services research has become common, few efforts are directed toward in-depth understanding of the specific ecological quantities people value. The theoretical framework of final ecosystem services focuses attention on such measurable attributes, as a common currency for social-ec...
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doaj-c3d407c6957c410686f5099bde131e542020-11-25T00:19:00ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872017-09-012231510.5751/ES-09496-2203159496Rivers and streams in the media: a content analysis of ecosystem servicesMatthew A. Weber0Shannon Caplan1Paul Ringold2Karen Blocksom3Independent ConsultantDepartment of Anthropology, Oregon State UniversityU.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Research and Development, Western Ecology DivisionU.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Western Ecology DivisionAlthough ecosystem services research has become common, few efforts are directed toward in-depth understanding of the specific ecological quantities people value. The theoretical framework of final ecosystem services focuses attention on such measurable attributes, as a common currency for social-ecological systems research. Environmental communications as well as ecological monitoring and analysis efforts could be enhanced through increased documentation of final ecosystem services. For example, small changes in the way ecosystems are described could strongly influence relevance to the public and improve the foundation for environmental decision making. Focusing on rivers and streams, we conducted a content analysis of existing publications to document the breadth and frequency with which various measurable attributes, such as flooding, water quality characteristics, and wildlife appeared in different news sources over a multiyear timeline. In addition to attributes, motivations for human interest in river-related resources were also coded, such as recreation or preservation for future generations. To allow testing of differences between materials written for different audiences, three sources were sampled: a blog hosted by National Geographic, New York Times articles, and Wall Street Journal articles. The coding approach was rigorously tested in a pilot phase, with measures developed to ensure high data quality, including use of two independent coders. Results show numerous similarities across sources with some notable differences in emphasis. Significant relationships between groups of attribute and motivation codes were also found, one outcome of which is further support for the importance of nonuse values for fish and wildlife. Besides offering insight on ecosystem services, the project demonstrates an in-depth quantitative approach to analyzing preexisting qualitative data.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol22/iss3/art15/content analysisfinal ecosystem servicesmediamultivariate analysis of variancenonmetric multidimensional scalingrivers and streams |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Matthew A. Weber Shannon Caplan Paul Ringold Karen Blocksom |
spellingShingle |
Matthew A. Weber Shannon Caplan Paul Ringold Karen Blocksom Rivers and streams in the media: a content analysis of ecosystem services Ecology and Society content analysis final ecosystem services media multivariate analysis of variance nonmetric multidimensional scaling rivers and streams |
author_facet |
Matthew A. Weber Shannon Caplan Paul Ringold Karen Blocksom |
author_sort |
Matthew A. Weber |
title |
Rivers and streams in the media: a content analysis of ecosystem services |
title_short |
Rivers and streams in the media: a content analysis of ecosystem services |
title_full |
Rivers and streams in the media: a content analysis of ecosystem services |
title_fullStr |
Rivers and streams in the media: a content analysis of ecosystem services |
title_full_unstemmed |
Rivers and streams in the media: a content analysis of ecosystem services |
title_sort |
rivers and streams in the media: a content analysis of ecosystem services |
publisher |
Resilience Alliance |
series |
Ecology and Society |
issn |
1708-3087 |
publishDate |
2017-09-01 |
description |
Although ecosystem services research has become common, few efforts are directed toward in-depth understanding of the specific ecological quantities people value. The theoretical framework of final ecosystem services focuses attention on such measurable attributes, as a common currency for social-ecological systems research. Environmental communications as well as ecological monitoring and analysis efforts could be enhanced through increased documentation of final ecosystem services. For example, small changes in the way ecosystems are described could strongly influence relevance to the public and improve the foundation for environmental decision making. Focusing on rivers and streams, we conducted a content analysis of existing publications to document the breadth and frequency with which various measurable attributes, such as flooding, water quality characteristics, and wildlife appeared in different news sources over a multiyear timeline. In addition to attributes, motivations for human interest in river-related resources were also coded, such as recreation or preservation for future generations. To allow testing of differences between materials written for different audiences, three sources were sampled: a blog hosted by National Geographic, New York Times articles, and Wall Street Journal articles. The coding approach was rigorously tested in a pilot phase, with measures developed to ensure high data quality, including use of two independent coders. Results show numerous similarities across sources with some notable differences in emphasis. Significant relationships between groups of attribute and motivation codes were also found, one outcome of which is further support for the importance of nonuse values for fish and wildlife. Besides offering insight on ecosystem services, the project demonstrates an in-depth quantitative approach to analyzing preexisting qualitative data. |
topic |
content analysis final ecosystem services media multivariate analysis of variance nonmetric multidimensional scaling rivers and streams |
url |
http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol22/iss3/art15/ |
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