Plant awareness is linked to plant relevance: A review of educational and ethnobiological literature (1998–2020)
Stagg, BC; Dillon, J
Date: 21 September 2022
Article
Journal
Plants People Planet
Publisher
Wiley
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Societal Impact Statement
This research attempts to provide novel insights into plant awareness disparity (plant blindness), through a systematic and critical examination of the educational and ethnobiological literature. The low interest and awareness for plants is well documented in urban societies and has serious implications for ...
Societal Impact Statement
This research attempts to provide novel insights into plant awareness disparity (plant blindness), through a systematic and critical examination of the educational and ethnobiological literature. The low interest and awareness for plants is well documented in urban societies and has serious implications for biodiversity conservation and sustainable land-use. This study is significant because it provides a comprehensive analysis of the characteristics of human-plant relations in different societies, which does not currently exist in the academic literature. The findings suggest that people's plant awareness develops where they have frequent interactions with plants that have direct relevance to their lives.
Summary
The inattention to plants, known as ‘plant blindness’ or ‘plant awareness disparity’, is an established concern amongst biologists, but there has been no comprehensive and critical examination of the investigative literature to date. This study aims to address this, with a narrative review of experimental studies published in indexed journals from 1998 to 2020. Data were extracted using a suite of relevant search terms, characterised using key words and subjected to a thematic content analysis; 326 studies were shortlisted for review, with the majority in the subject areas of biological education, ethnobiology and biological conservation. The prevalent research methods were interviews and free-listing exercises (ethnobiology) and questionnaires and tests (education). The most common characteristics of plant awareness disparity were a deficit of knowledge or identification skills, followed by an attention or memory advantage for animals compared to plants, preference for animals and low interest in plants. There was no concrete evidence of innate plant awareness disparity; instead, diminished experience of nature in urbanised societies appeared to be the cause. Virtually, all the 87 studies that found evidence of plant awareness disparity were undertaken in urban populations in high-income countries. By contrast, there were 109 studies of extensive botanical knowledge based on rural communities dependent on biological resources, where individual expertise was found to be proportionate to the extent of wild plant collecting. We conclude that a decline in relevant experience with plants leads to a cyclical process of inattention that could be addressed through first-hand experiences of edible and useful plants in local environments.
School of Education
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
Item views 0
Full item downloads 0
Except where otherwise noted, this item's licence is described as © 2022 The Authors. Plants, People, Planet published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of New Phytologist Foundation. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Modern pollen rain predicts shifts in plant trait composition but not plant diversity along the Andes–Amazon elevational gradient
van der Sande, MT; Bush, MB; Urrego, DH; et al. (Wiley / International Association for Vegetation Science, 20 July 2020)Aims: Terrestrial ecosystems are changing in biodiversity, species composition and functional trait composition. To understand the underlying causes of these changes and predict the long-term resilience of the ecosystem ... -
Impacts of invasive ants on pollination of native plants are similar in invaded and restored plant communities
Costa, A; Heleno, R; Freide, EF; et al. (Elsevier, 23 February 2023)Ants are amongst the most successful invaders worldwide and can markedly modify invaded communities through biotic interactions. Invasive ants, for example, can compete with native pollinators for resources, act as legitimate ... -
Plants Under Pressure: A Joint Experimental-Theoretical Investigation of the Plant Response to Local Stimuli
Hembrow, J (University of Exeter Physics, 3 April 2023)Rising temperatures and growing populations are putting increased pressure on food sources, with pathogens moving polewards in search of more favourable conditions. Stopping crop losses due to disease would provide enough ...