Urban nature at the fingertips: Investigating wild food foraging to enable nature interactions of urban dwellers

Ambio. 2022 May;51(5):1168-1178. doi: 10.1007/s13280-021-01648-1. Epub 2021 Oct 28.

Abstract

Meaningful human-nature interactions can counteract the extinction of experience and positively influence people's nature relatedness, health and wellbeing. In this study, we explored urban wild food foraging to understand how best to enable human-nature interactions in cities by means of foraging. Using a structured questionnaire, a total of 458 residents of Vienna, Austria were surveyed. Sixty-four percent of visitors of public urban green spaces previously foraged for wild food species, whereas foraging frequencies were related to the targeted plant species and their life forms. People who foraged more frequently had greater nature relatedness, more childhood foraging experiences and lived on the outskirts of the city, but their socio-demographic backgrounds were heterogeneous. Social acceptance and lack of access to wild foods were perceived to be barriers. To promote nature relatedness through urban foraging, the legal framework, access to low-contamination foraging areas, availability of wild foods and social acceptance need to be improved.

Keywords: Edible city; Nature connectedness; Provisioning ecosystem services; Urban food forestry; Urban non-timber forest product; Wild plant gathering.

MeSH terms

  • Austria
  • Child
  • Cities
  • Food*
  • Humans
  • Plants*
  • Surveys and Questionnaires