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Insect Cultural Services: How Insects Have Changed Our Lives and How Can We Do Better for Them

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Insects—as many other organisms—provide services for our societies, which are essential for our sustainable future. A classic example of an insect service is pollination, without which food production collapses. To date, though, there has often been a generalised misconception about...

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Autores principales: Duffus, Natalie E., Christie, Craig R., Morimoto, Juliano
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8143511/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33921962
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects12050377
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author Duffus, Natalie E.
Christie, Craig R.
Morimoto, Juliano
author_facet Duffus, Natalie E.
Christie, Craig R.
Morimoto, Juliano
author_sort Duffus, Natalie E.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Insects—as many other organisms—provide services for our societies, which are essential for our sustainable future. A classic example of an insect service is pollination, without which food production collapses. To date, though, there has often been a generalised misconception about the benefits of insects to our societies, and misunderstandings on how insects have revolutionised our cultures and thus our lives. This misunderstanding likely underpins the general avoidance, disregard for, or even deliberate attempts to exterminate insects from our daily lives. In this Perspective, we provide a different viewpoint, and highlight the key areas in which insects have changed our cultures, from culinary traditions to architecture to fashion and beyond. We then propose a general framework to help portray insects—and their benefits to our societies—under a positive light, and argue that this can help with long-term changes in people’s attitude towards insects. This change will in turn contribute to more appropriate conservation efforts aimed to protect insect biodiversity and the services it provides. Therefore, our ultimate goal in the paper is to raise awareness of the intricate and wonderful cultural relationships between people and insects that are fundamental to our long-term survival in our changing world. ABSTRACT: Societies have benefited directly and indirectly from ecosystem services provided by insects for centuries (e.g., pollination by bees and waste recycling by beetles). The relationship between people and insect ecosystem services has evolved and influenced how societies perceive and relate to nature and with each other, for example, by shaping cultural values (‘cultural ecosystem services’). Thus, better understanding the significance of insect cultural services can change societies’ motivations underpinning conservation efforts. To date, however, we still overlook the significance of many insect cultural services in shaping our societies, which in turn likely contributes to the generalised misconceptions and misrepresentations of insects in the media such as television and the internet. To address this gap, we have reviewed an identified list of insect cultural services that influence our societies on a daily basis, including cultural services related to art, recreation, and the development of traditional belief systems. This list allowed us to formulate a multi-level framework which aims to serve as a compass to guide societies to better appreciate and potentially change the perception of insect cultural services from individual to global levels. This framework can become an important tool for gaining public support for conservation interventions targeting insects and the services that they provide. More broadly, this framework highlights the importance of considering cultural ecosystems services—for which values can be difficult to quantify in traditional terms—in shaping the relationship between people and nature.
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spelling pubmed-81435112021-05-25 Insect Cultural Services: How Insects Have Changed Our Lives and How Can We Do Better for Them Duffus, Natalie E. Christie, Craig R. Morimoto, Juliano Insects Perspective SIMPLE SUMMARY: Insects—as many other organisms—provide services for our societies, which are essential for our sustainable future. A classic example of an insect service is pollination, without which food production collapses. To date, though, there has often been a generalised misconception about the benefits of insects to our societies, and misunderstandings on how insects have revolutionised our cultures and thus our lives. This misunderstanding likely underpins the general avoidance, disregard for, or even deliberate attempts to exterminate insects from our daily lives. In this Perspective, we provide a different viewpoint, and highlight the key areas in which insects have changed our cultures, from culinary traditions to architecture to fashion and beyond. We then propose a general framework to help portray insects—and their benefits to our societies—under a positive light, and argue that this can help with long-term changes in people’s attitude towards insects. This change will in turn contribute to more appropriate conservation efforts aimed to protect insect biodiversity and the services it provides. Therefore, our ultimate goal in the paper is to raise awareness of the intricate and wonderful cultural relationships between people and insects that are fundamental to our long-term survival in our changing world. ABSTRACT: Societies have benefited directly and indirectly from ecosystem services provided by insects for centuries (e.g., pollination by bees and waste recycling by beetles). The relationship between people and insect ecosystem services has evolved and influenced how societies perceive and relate to nature and with each other, for example, by shaping cultural values (‘cultural ecosystem services’). Thus, better understanding the significance of insect cultural services can change societies’ motivations underpinning conservation efforts. To date, however, we still overlook the significance of many insect cultural services in shaping our societies, which in turn likely contributes to the generalised misconceptions and misrepresentations of insects in the media such as television and the internet. To address this gap, we have reviewed an identified list of insect cultural services that influence our societies on a daily basis, including cultural services related to art, recreation, and the development of traditional belief systems. This list allowed us to formulate a multi-level framework which aims to serve as a compass to guide societies to better appreciate and potentially change the perception of insect cultural services from individual to global levels. This framework can become an important tool for gaining public support for conservation interventions targeting insects and the services that they provide. More broadly, this framework highlights the importance of considering cultural ecosystems services—for which values can be difficult to quantify in traditional terms—in shaping the relationship between people and nature. MDPI 2021-04-22 /pmc/articles/PMC8143511/ /pubmed/33921962 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects12050377 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Perspective
Duffus, Natalie E.
Christie, Craig R.
Morimoto, Juliano
Insect Cultural Services: How Insects Have Changed Our Lives and How Can We Do Better for Them
title Insect Cultural Services: How Insects Have Changed Our Lives and How Can We Do Better for Them
title_full Insect Cultural Services: How Insects Have Changed Our Lives and How Can We Do Better for Them
title_fullStr Insect Cultural Services: How Insects Have Changed Our Lives and How Can We Do Better for Them
title_full_unstemmed Insect Cultural Services: How Insects Have Changed Our Lives and How Can We Do Better for Them
title_short Insect Cultural Services: How Insects Have Changed Our Lives and How Can We Do Better for Them
title_sort insect cultural services: how insects have changed our lives and how can we do better for them
topic Perspective
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8143511/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33921962
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects12050377
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