Published in MethodsX (a multidisciplinary, open access, peer-reviewed journal), the SELINA-supported article “A simple method for mapping winter recreational fishing ecosystem services supply in lakes. A contribution to mapping freshwater ecosystem services” introduces a novel method for mapping winter recreational fishery ecosystem services (ES) in urban lakes using high-resolution images from an unmanned aerial vehicle. This approach helps identify fishing ice holes, particularly beneficial for northern latitudes.
Although urban areas negatively impact the environment, they supply a wide range of ecosystem services (ES), mainly cultural ones. Recreation near urban green areas is widespread, including fishing. In northern latitudes, during the winter, lakes are frozen, and several urban dwellers practice ice fishing. Although this activity is well known, no attempts were made to assess and map winter recreational fishery ES supply in lakes. In this work, we developed a methodology to map this ES, taking an urban lake in Vilnius (Lithuania) as an example. A standardized protocol was developed using an unmanned aerial vehicle (proximal sensing), further georeferencing and correcting the gathered images, vectorizing the fishing ice holes, and mapping them using two different methods: Kernel and Point Density. The method developed in this work can be applied in northern areas to identify recreational fishing ES during the winter.
In the SELINA publication:
- A novel method was developed to map winter recreational fishery ES supply in lakes;
- High-resolution images were taken from an unmanned aerial vehicle to identify fishing ice holes in an urban lake.
- The method maps a cultural ES, which is trendy in northern latitudes.
Read the full paper here.