Wildlife and public perceptions of opportunities for psychological restoration in local natural settings

Author:

Johansson Maria1ORCID,Hartig Terry23ORCID,Frank Jens4ORCID,Flykt Anders5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Environmental Psychology, Department of Architecture and Built Environment Lund University Lund Sweden

2. Institute for Housing and Urban Research Uppsala University Uppsala Sweden

3. Department of Psychology Uppsala University Uppsala Sweden

4. Grimsö Wildlife Research Station, Department of Ecology Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Riddarhyttan Sweden

5. Department of Psychology and Social Work Mid Sweden University Östersund Sweden

Abstract

Abstract Wildlife might be important to psychologically restorative values and disvalues of nature, as interactions with wildlife could trigger both positive and negative feelings. Research on positive experiences of human–wildlife interactions has largely involved participants who voluntarily sought out wildlife experiences or it has addressed encounters with non‐threatening animals in urban green spaces. Less is known about the opportunities for psychological restoration in landscapes shared with mammals that are perceived to pose a threat to human activities and health. This study provides a nuanced understanding of the role of wildlife in public perceptions of the restorative potential and experience of psychological restoration in local natural settings. Twenty‐eight participants (15 women, 13 men, 18–75 years) took part in focus group interviews subject to a reflexive thematic analysis. As an analytical framework, we used a theoretical model for how people appraise the relevance, implications, coping potential and norm congruence of human–wildlife interactions and how such appraisals may support or hinder the restoration experienced in local natural settings. Relevance appraisals revealed shifts in consideration of the presence of wildlife from an integrated part of the natural scenery (background) to a distinct figure (foreground). Implication appraisals revealed that wildlife encounters would hinder the experienced psychological restoration if the animal was appraised as dangerous, disgusting, causing a nuisance or destructive. Wildlife encounters would promote restoration if the animal displayed attractive traits, features or fascinating behaviour or movements, and if it opened engaging interaction situations. Coping strategies perceived as feasible to deal with negative implications of wildlife involved avoidance of the local natural setting, preparatory behaviour displayed before a visit and precautionary behaviour displayed during the visit. Important public health effects might be gained if wildlife policy and management explicitly consider what animals mean to the perceived restorative potential of local natural settings. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference61 articles.

1. Anon. (2023).Artportalen. Species observations system provided by the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences.https://www.artportalen.se

2. Everyday green space and experienced well-being: the significance of wildlife encounters

3. Nature and mental health: An ecosystem service perspective

4. Using thematic analysis in psychology

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