How Bilberry Pickers Use Estonian Forests: Implications for Sustaining a Non-Timber Value

Authors

  • Liina Remm University of Tartu
  • Mihkel Rünkla Department of Zoology, Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences, Univer sity of Tar tu, Vanemuise 46, EE-51014 Tartu, Estonia
  • Asko Lõhmus Department of Zoology, Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences, Univer sity of Tar tu, Vanemuise 46, EE-51014 Tartu

Abstract

Behaviour of people, who consume non-timber forest goods, is an understudied link between sustainable forestry and cultural tradition. We explored relationships between natural bilberry (Vaccinium myrtillus) supply and its consumption in Estonia. Based on 53 semi-structured interviews with regular berry-pickers, we modelled their picking site preferences at the landscape scale. The analysis confirmed that those people use clearly delineated picking areas, which constitute a subset of bilberry-rich habitats and are perceived as relatively private information, shared with few people (notably along family lines). Clear-cutting was a major disturbance (60% of respondents had the experience of site loss), while bilberry spread in regenerating forests or after drainage was hardly noticed. Berry-pickers preferred public forests, but had no preference for protected areas. These patterns distinguish spatial modelling of continuous-cover forestry and gap-felling systems in public forests as a basic approach for sustaining national bilberry-gathering tradition.

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Published

2018-12-31

How to Cite

Remm, L., Rünkla, M., & Lõhmus, A. (2018). How Bilberry Pickers Use Estonian Forests: Implications for Sustaining a Non-Timber Value. Baltic Forestry, 24(2), 287–295. Retrieved from https://balticforestryojs.lammc.lt/ojs/index.php/BF/article/view/348

Issue

Section

Forest Ecology