Te Huataki Waiora School of Health, Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato University of Waikato, Hamilton 3216, New Zealand.
School of Human Movement & Nutrition Sciences, The University of Queensland, St Lucia QLD 4072, Australia.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Jan 8;18(2):450. doi: 10.3390/ijerph18020450.
Commentators are advocating for research to better understand relationships between healthy coastal ecosystems and human wellbeing. Doing so requires inter- and transdisciplinary approaches across humanities, arts, social sciences, and science and technology disciplines. These approaches include culturally diverse knowledge systems, such as indigenous ones, that locate sustainable use of and relationships to marine ecosystems. This paper contributes to this agenda through a case-study of relationships between coastal ecosystems and human wellbeing in Aotearoa New Zealand. This article highlights interconnected cultural and wellbeing benefits of, and socio-ecological relationships between, these coastal ecosystems drawing on a case study of one ocean-based, 'immersive' leisure activity, surfing. Further, it examines how these relationships impact human physical, emotional and spiritual wellbeing, and the wellbeing of communities and ecosystems. The research illustrates that surfing creates strong bonds between practitioners and coastal places, linking the health of marine environments and people. We demonstrate the value of a transdisciplinary place-based approach that integrates research across the humanities and social sciences and engages with Indigenous knowledge (Mātauranga Māori). This argument for multicultural co-learning shows the value of Western and Māori vantage points for how we understand coastal blue spaces. Indigenous perspectives, we conclude, deepen appreciation, as well as equity considerations, of how we understand place, wellbeing, and long-term sustainable relationships with marine ecosystems.
评论员倡导开展研究,以更好地理解健康的沿海生态系统与人类福祉之间的关系。为此,需要人文、艺术、社会科学以及科学和技术学科领域开展跨学科和交叉学科研究。这些方法包括各种文化的知识体系,例如土著知识体系,这些知识体系定位了海洋生态系统的可持续利用和与之的关系。本文通过对新西兰奥特亚罗瓦沿海生态系统与人类福祉之间关系的案例研究,为这一议程做出了贡献。本文通过对一种基于海洋的“沉浸式”休闲活动——冲浪的案例研究,强调了这些沿海生态系统之间相互关联的文化和福祉效益,以及社会生态关系。此外,本文还探讨了这些关系如何影响人类的身体、情感和精神福祉,以及社区和生态系统的福祉。该研究表明,冲浪在从业者和沿海地区之间建立了紧密的联系,将海洋环境和人类的健康联系在一起。我们展示了一种跨学科的基于地点的方法的价值,该方法整合了人文和社会科学领域的研究,并借鉴了土著知识(Mātauranga Māori)。这种多元文化共同学习的观点表明,对于我们如何理解沿海蓝色空间,西方和毛利人的观点都具有价值。我们得出的结论是,土著观点加深了我们对地方、福祉以及与海洋生态系统建立长期可持续关系的理解和公平性考虑。