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Article
Dog W alkers’ V iews of Urban Biodiversity across Five
European Cities
Leonie K. Fischer 1,2,3, * and Ingo Kowarik 1,2
1
Department of Ecology , Ecosystem Science / Plant Ecology , T echnische Universität Berlin, Rothenburgstr . 12,
D-12165 Berlin, Germany; [email protected]
2 Berlin-Brandenburg Institute of Advanced Biodiversity Resear ch (BBIB), D-14195 Berlin, Germany
3 Institute of Landscape Planning and Ecology , University of Stuttgart, Keplerstraße 11,
D-70174 Stuttgart, Germany
* Correspondence: [email protected] ; T el.: + 49-711-685-83380
Received: 13 February 2020; Accepted: 23 April 2020; Published: 25 April 2020
    
  

Abstract:
Contact with natur e makes people feel better , live healthier and act mor e
envir onmentally-friendly . W e hypothesized that dog walking, an omnipr esent people–nature
interaction in cities, translates to a mor e positive view of urban nature and, subsequently , to mor e
support for conservation initiatives. Insights into such positive side-e ff ects of dog walking are
r elevant for dog-related urban policies that often focus on negative impacts of dogs (e.g., health risks,
disturbance of wildlife). Based on a field survey in five European cities ( N = 3717), we analyzed if
people who walked dogs r egularly valued four urban ecosystem types (park meadows, wastelands,
str eetscapes, for ests), and the plant species diversity within, di ff erently fr om other people. Opposite to
our hypothesis, participants fr om both groups valued urban ecosystems and their biodiversity very
similarly acr oss the cities. Thus, our study does not confirm that r egular dog walkers value natural
elements mor e than other people. It thus r emains an important challenge for urban planners to
balance services and disservices of dog walking in urban gr eenspaces.
Keywords:
biodiversity valuation; cultural ecosystem services; greenspace management; natur e
interaction; natur e-related outdoor activity; pet ownership; urban biodiversity per ception
1. Introduction
Experiencing natur e in outdoor surroundings is an exception, rather than a norm, in today’s
society [
1
] because experiences such as climbing trees, going fishing or watching bir ds have sever ely
declined in the last decade [
2
]. The loss of natur e experiences contradicts basic human needs,
as experiencing natur e is fundamental to human wellbeing; being outside in gr een areas impr oves
physical and mental health of people [
3
,
4
]. At the same time, interaction with natural elements in cities
has been shown to lead to a positive attitude towards natur e, e.g., through gar dening activities [
5
],
urban foraging [
6
] or fr equent visits to parks [
7
]. As a positive feedback to urban conservation
appr oaches, a higher valuation of non-human life forms can translate to an improved envir onmental
stewar dship (e.g., [ 8 , 9 ]).
One phenomenon that encourages many urban dwellers to go outside is walking a dog (e.g., [
10
]).
Dog ownership is a global phenomenon with, for example, 36–39% of households owning dogs in the
United States of America and the United Kingdom [
11
,
12
]. A range of urban greenspaces attract dog
walkers. For example, in six European cities, dog walkers ar e between 8% to 22% of park users [
13
,
14
].
While dog walking has the potential to incr ease urban nature experiences—with positive feedbacks to
human health and envir onmental stewardship—it is unknown whether people who r egularly walk a
dog value urban natur e di ff erently fr om people that do not. This question is r elevant for dog-related
Sustainability 2020 , 12 , 3507; doi:10.3390 / su12093507 www .mdpi.com / journal / sustainability

Sustainability 2020 , 12 , 3507 2 of 11
urban envir onmental policies [
15
,
16
] since these should consider the full range of dog-mediated e ff ects
on people and the envir onment.
Indeed, dogs in urban envir onments are associated with manifold positive and negative impacts.
These can be conceptualized as cultural ecosystem services, ecosystem disservices and envir onmental
impacts as indicated in Figur e 1 . As an important cultural ecosystem service, dog walking supports
human health and wellbeing [
17
]. Dog ownership often—but not necessarily [
18
,
19
]—incr eases
physical outdoor activity [
20
,
21
], even in unfavorable weather [
22
]. Moreover , daily interaction with
dogs may lead to positive mental r eactions and social interactions such as meeting other dog walkers
and pr oviding a conversation point [
23
]. However , dogs can also compromise human health—and that
of animals—by bites, and the transmission of diseases or pathogenic infections [
24
–
26
]. Accor dingly ,
people per ceive animal waste as a health risk to themselves (e.g., while collecting edible plants in urban
settings [
27
]). In some urban r egions, feral dog populations have established from companion dogs
and now induce negative associations bound to urban disor der [
28
]. Dog-mediated envir onmental
impacts include negative influences on wildlife [
26
,
29
,
30
] and changes in the soil and water settings
thr ough eutrophication fr om dog feces [ 31 , 32 ].
S u s t a i n a b i l i t y 2 0 2 0 , 1 2 , x F O R P E E R R E V I E W 3 o f 1 1

F i g u r e 1 . P o s s i b l e r e l a t i o n s h i p s b e t w e e n d o g w a l k i n g i n c i t i e s , p e o p l e a n d t h e e n v i r o n m e n t . D o g
w a l k i n g c an s u p p o r t m a n i f o l d c u l t u r a l e c o s y s t e m s e r v i c e s b u t a l s o i n d u c e s d i s s e r v i c e s an d n e g a t i v e
e n v i r o n m e n t a l i m p a c t s . E n v i r o n m e n t a l p o l i c i e s t h at r e g u l at e d o g w a l k i n g i n c i t i e s s h o u l d b e
i n f o r m e d b y t h e t o t al r a n g e o f d o g - m e d i at e d e f f e c t s o n p e o p l e an d t h e e n v i r o n m e n t ( s y m b o l i z e d b y
t h e d o t t e d a r r o w s ) , i n c l u d i n g p o s s i b l e p o s i t i v e s i d e e f f e c t s o n b i o d i v e r s i t y c o n s e r v at i o n . B l a c k a r r o w s
i n d i c a t e e v i d e n c e d r e l at i o n s h i p s . G r e y ar r o w s i n d i c a t e t h e h y p o t h e s i z e d r e l a t i o n s h i p b e t w e e n d o g
w a l k i n g an d v a l u at i o n o f u r b a n n a t u r e , w h i c h c o u l d t r an s l a t e t o an i n c r e a s e d s t e w ar d s h i p f o r n at u r e
c o n s e r v a t i o n i n c i t i e s a n d c o n s i d e r s t h a t d o g w a l k e r s m ay r e p r e s e n t v al u a b l e a l l i e s f o r t h e
c o n s e r v a t i o n o f u r b an n a t u r e .
2 . Ma t er i a l s a n d Me t h o d s
2 .1 . F i e l d S u r v e y
O u r s t u d y w as c o n d u c t e d w i t h i n t h e f r a m e w o r k o f t h e G r e e n S u r g e p r o j e c t [ 4 2] , an d e m p l o y e d
a n e x t e n s i v e f i e l d s u r v e y i n f i v e d i f f e r e n t E u r o p e an c i t i e s . T h e q u e s t i o n n ai r e s t u d y w a s c o n d u c t e d at
t h e i n t e r s e c t i o n o f t h e s o c i a l an d e c o l o g i c a l s c i e n c e s , t o e v al u a t e h o w p e o p l e v a l u e a n d u s e u r b an
n a t u r e i n d i f f e r e n t e c o s y s t e m t y p e s a n d t h e b i o d i v e r s i t y w i t h i n . T h e an a l y s e s a t h a n d s p e c i f i c a l l y
u s e s t h e d a t a w e g at h e r e d o n t h e v a l u a t i o n o f u r b an e c o s y s t e m s a n d t h e i r b i o d i v e r s i t y w i t h r e g ar d
t o p e o p l e t h a t w a l k d o g s o n a r e g u l ar b as i s o r n o t . T h u s , i n t h e f o l l o w i n g , t h e r e s p e c t i v e p a r t o f t h e
q u e s t i o n n ai r e a n d t h e e v o l v i n g d a t a b a s e i s e x p l ai n e d . F o r m o r e i n f o r m a t i o n o n t h e f i e l d s u r v e y i t s e l f ,
a n d i n f o r m a t i o n t h a t i s m o r e s p e c i f i c o n t h e d a t a a s s e s s e d o n h o w p e o p l e u s e u r b an g r e e n s p a c e s , s e e
[ 14 ,38] .
T o a s s e s s t h e v a l u a t i o n o f s e v e r a l e c o s y s t e m t y p e s a n d t h e b i o d i v e r s i t y l e v e l s w i t h i n , w e u s e d
s t a n d a r d i z e d q u e s t i o n n a i r e s w i t h e m b e d d e d p h o t o g r a p h i c s t i m u l i m a t e r i a l t h a t d i s p l a y e d f o u r
e c o s y s t e m t y p e s ( p a r k m e a d o w s , w a s t e l a n d s , s t r e e t s c a p e s , f o r e s t s ; s e e F i g u r e 2 ) . T h e s e t y p e s r e p r e s e n t
a r an g e o f u r b a n e n v i r o n m e n t s , w h i c h a r e u s u a l l y u s e d f o r d o g w a l k i n g . F o r e ac h e c o s y s t e m t y p e , t h e
s t i m u l i m a t e r i a l s h o w e d t h r e e b i o d i v e r s i t y l e v e l s ( l o w , m e d i u m , h i g h ) . T h e i n f o r m a t i o n o n t h e
b i o d i v e r s i t y l e v e l s w e r e b a s e d o n a c t u a l p l an t s p e c i e s r i c h n e s s t h a t w a s a s s e s s e d v i a v e g e t a t i o n
m a p p i n g . I n a s s o c i a t i o n w i t h v e g e t at i o n m a p p i n g , p h o t o g r a p h s w e r e t a k e n o n t h e s i t e , t h a t i s , w e k n o w
e x a c t l y w h i c h a n d h o w m a n y p l a n t s p e c i e s a r e p r e s e n t e d i n t h e r aw p h o t o g r a p h i c m a t e r i a l . F r o m t h i s
m a t e r i a l , w e s e l e c t e d p h o t o g r a p h s t h a t r e p r e s e n t e d t h e l o w e s t , m e d i u m a n d h i g h e s t s p e c i e s r i c h n e s s
f o r e a c h e c o s y s t e m t y p e a n d c i t y . F o r t h e p a r k m e a d o w , f o r e x a m p l e , s p e c i e s n u m b e r s r an g e d f r o m 10
s p e c i e s ( l o w b i o d i v e r s i t y l e v e l ) t o 17 ( m e d i u m b i o d i v e r s i t y l e v e l ) t o 26 ( h i g h b i o d i v e r s i t y l e v e l ; m e an s
f o r f i v e E u r o p e a n c i t i e s ; f o r m o r e i n f o r m a t i o n , s e e T a b l e S 1 i n [ 3 8] ) .

Figure 1.
Possible relationships between dog walking in cities, people and the envir onment.
Dog walking can support manifold cultural ecosystem services but also induces disservices and
negative enviro nmental impacts. Envir onmental policies that regulate dog walking in cities should be
informed by the total range of dog-mediated e ff ects on people and the environment (symbolized by
the dotted arr ows), including possible positive side e ff ects on biodiversity conservation. Black arr ows
indicate evidenced relationships. Grey arr ows indicate the hypothesized relationship between dog
walking and valuation of urban nature, which could translate to an incr eased stewardship for natur e
conservation in cities and considers that dog walkers may r epresent valuable allies for the conservation
of urban nature.
Beyond this backgr ound, dogs r emain a controversial topic in urban society , and in city’s
envir onmental policies [
15
,
16
]. T o enhance opportunities and minimize risks for both people and
the envir onment, dog-related policies must consider tradeo ff s between negative and positive e ff ects
r elated to dog ownership and dog walking in urban areas (Figur e 1 ).
W e here addr ess the intersection between dog walking and the valuation of urban nature, which
is important for two r easons. First, dog walking could compensate for the loss of nature contact
experienced by urban r esidents [
1
,
2
]. Second, interaction with green spaces in cities could incr ease dog
walkers’ appr eciation of urban nature, which might translate to an increased commitment to natur e

Sustainability 2020 , 12 , 3507 3 of 11
conservation as indicated in Figur e 1 [
33
]. Up to now , there ar e some hints to changes in people’s
values and attitudes towar ds nature elements when they own or walk a dog, as opposed to people who
do not. For example, the attitude towards other animals may be influenced by owning a companion
dog [
34
], including being less afraid of wildlife, such as snakes [
35
]. W e therefor e hypothesize that
people who r egularly walk dogs and inevitably come into contact with di ff erent urban open spaces
will assess urban natur e more positively than people who do not walk dogs.
In this study , we ther efor e address whether contact of r egular dog walkers with di ff erent forms of
urban gr een spaces is associated with a more positive view of urban natur e, compared to other people.
While answering this main question, we have consider ed three di ff er ent contexts. Since the assessment
of how people value urban natur e or urban green may depend on the specific type of ecosystem
addr essed (e.g., forest vs. wasteland; [
36
–
38
]), we, first, included four types of ecosystems in our study ,
which ar e frequently used for dog walking (park meadows, wastelands, str eetscapes, forests). Second,
we conducted a Eur ope-wide study involving five cities from five Eur opean countries (Bari, Italy;
Berlin, Germany; Edinburgh, UK; Ljubljana, Slovenia; Malmö, Sweden), because the assessment of
urban gr een spaces can vary depending on the geographical context [
38
–
40
]. Many studies on the
assessment or per ception of urban nature ar e based on green space types or urban gr een as such and
do not addr ess the species level [
41
]. The latter , however , is most r elevant for biodiversity conservation.
W e ther efore, thir d, considered di ff er ent levels of biodiversity for each of the ecosystem types addressed,
i.e., low , medium and high plant species richness.
Specifically , we aimed to answer the following r esearch questions: Do people who walk a dog
r egularly value urban nature di ff er ently compared to those who do not, and does this valuation vary by
(a)
the ecosystem context, that is, r egarding four di ff er ent urban greenspace types (park meadows,
wastelands, str eetscapes, forests);
(b)
the geographical context, that is, r egarding five cities (Bari, Berlin, Edinbur gh, Ljubljana, Malmö)
in five Eur opean countries; and
(c)
the biodiversity context, that is, regar ding thr ee levels of plant species richness (low , medium,
high) within each of the four ecosystem types?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Field Survey
Our study was conducted within the framework of the Gr een Surge pr oject [
42
], and employed an
extensive field survey in five di ff erent Eur opean cities. The questionnaire study was conducted at the
intersection of the social and ecological sciences, to evaluate how people value and use urban nature in
di ff er ent ecosystem types and the biodiversity within. The analyses at hand specifically uses the data
we gather ed on the valuation of urban ecosystems and their biodiversity with regar d to people that
walk dogs on a r egular basis or not. Thus, in the following, the respective part of the questionnair e and
the evolving database is explained. For more information on the field survey itself, and information
that is mor e specific on the data assessed on how people use urban greenspaces, see [ 14 , 38 ].
T o assess the valuation of several ecosystem types and the biodiversity levels within, we used
standar dized questionnaires with embedded photographic stimuli material that displayed four
ecosystem types (park meadows, wastelands, str eetscapes, forests; see Figur e 2 ). These types repr esent
a range of urban envir onments, which ar e usually used for dog walking. For each ecosystem type,
the stimuli material showed thr ee biodiversity levels (low , medium, high). The information on the
biodiversity levels wer e based on actual plant species richness that was assessed via vegetation
mapping. In association with vegetation mapping, photographs were taken on the site, that is, we know
exactly which and how many plant species ar e presented in the raw photographic material. Fr om this
material, we selected photographs that r epresented the lowest, medium and highest species richness
for each ecosystem type and city . For the park meadow , for example, species numbers ranged from

Sustainability 2020 , 12 , 3507 4 of 11
10 species (low biodiversity level) to 17 (medium biodiversity level) to 26 (high biodiversity level;
means for five Eur opean cities; for more information, see T able S1 in [ 38 ]).
S u s t a i n a b i l i t y 2 0 2 0 , 1 2 , x F O R P E E R R E V I E W 6 o f 1 1

s t a t i s t i c a l a n a l y s e s w e r e c ar r i e d o u t u s i n g R ( v e r s i o n 3 . 4. 3 ) i n t h e R S T U D I O e n v i r o n m e n t ( v e r s i o n
1 . 1. 3 83 ) .

F i g u r e 2 . S t u d y d e s i g n f o r t e s t i n g f o r e f f e c t s o f r e g u l a r d o g w a l k i n g o n t h e v al u a t i o n o f u r b a n n at u r e ,
d i f f e r e n t i a t e d f o r t h e c o n t e x t o f u r b an e c o s y s t e m t y p e s , b i o d i v e r s i t y l e v e l s an d E u r o p e an c i t i e s . T h e
p i c t u r e s s h o w e x a m p l e s o f t h e s t i m u l i u s e d i n t h e f i e l d s u r v e y . I n a l l , t h e s e c o l l a g e s i n c l u d e d f o u r
e c o s y s t e m t y p e s e a c h d e p i c t i n g t h r e e l e v e l s o f b i o d i v e r s i t y , a n d f o r al l f i v e s t u d y c i t i e s . A d d i t i o n a l l y ,
w e d i s p l ay e d f o r t h e s t r e e t s c a p e s c e n e a f o u r t h c o l l ag e w i t h o u t a n y v e g e t at i o n , a s t h i s i s a c o m m o n
s e t t i n g f o r s t r e e t s c ap e s g l o b al l y .
3 . R e s u l t s
I n a l l , 5 69 r e s p o n d e n t s i n d i c a t e d t o b e r e g u l ar d o g w a l k e r s , t h a t i s , 1 5% o f t h e s a m p l e . C o n t r ar y
t o w h a t w e o r i g i n a l l y as s u m e d , t h e r e s u l t s d o n o t c o n s i s t e n t l y s u p p o r t t h e i d e a t h a t r e g u l ar d o g
w a l k e r s v al u e u r b an g r e e n s p a c e s an d t h e i r b i o d i v e r s i t y d i f f e r e n t l y c o m p a r e d t o o t h e r p e o p l e .
H o w e v e r , t h e r e w e r e s o m e d i f f e r e n c e s i n t h e t h r e e c o n t e x t s w e e x a m i n e d .
3 .1 . E c o s ys t e m C o n t e x t
I n t h e e c o s y s t e m c o n t e x t , o u r f i e l d s u r v e y d e m o n s t r a t e s t h a t r e g u l ar d o g w a l k e r s v a l u e d w i l d
v e g e t a t i o n i n w a s t e l a n d s l e s s t h an o t h e r p e o p l e , b u t t h e r e w a s n o d i f f e r e n c e b e t w e e n b o t h g r o u p s f o r
t h e v a l u at i o n o f p a r k m e ad o w s , t h e w i l d v e g e t a t i o n i n s t r e e t s c ap e s an d u r b a n f o r e s t s ( T ab l e 2) .

Figure 2.
Study design for testing for e ff ects of r egular dog walking on the valuation of urban
nature, di ff er entiated for the context of urban ecosystem types, biodiversity levels and Eur opean cities.
The pictures show examples of the stimuli used in the field survey . In all, these collages included four
ecosystem types each depicting three levels of biodiversity , and for all five study cities. Additionally ,
we displayed for the streetscape scene a fourth collage without any vegetation, as this is a common
setting for streetscapes globally .
V egetation mappings and photographing wer e conducted in all ecosystem types, in all of the
five Eur opean cities, and for all biodiversity levels. The photographic material was then used for
composing collages, which were comparable not only in terms of their vegetation composition, but also
in r egard to the vegetation’s framing, such as a neutral blue sky and the urban context. For each of the
five cities we used four series of stimuli, that is, one picture series for each ecosystem type displaying
the di ff er ent biodiversity levels.
In the first section of the questionnair e, each respondent was asked to rate th e photographic
stimuli material that displayed the three biodiversity levels of park meadow and either the thr ee
biodiversity levels of wasteland, str eetscape or forest, r espectively . For the streetscape scene, we also
pr esented a fourth scene without any vegetation, as eradicating spontaneous vegetation along streets is
a common management appr oach in urban areas worldwide. Hereby , the items evaluated respondents’
pr eferences for each of the thr ee alternative scenes of park meadows by asking “How do you like

Sustainability 2020 , 12 , 3507 5 of 11
each of these thr ee variations of a meadow in a park?” using seven-point Likert scale (1, [like] not at
all–7, [like] completely). The same items were then used to assess r espondents’ valuations for each of
the pictur es of the second ecosystem type in question (wasteland, streetscape or for est, respectively).
In the second section of the questionnair e, we assessed each respondent’s backgr ound including
whether r espondents regularly walk a dog (see r elevant interview questions and resulting r esponse
and explanatory variables in T able 1 ).
The survey method, as well as the underlying concept of including series of stimuli material, was
tested in-depth one year prior to the main study with qualitative ( N = 9) and quantitative ( N = 979)
pr etests in German. The final version of the questionnaire was translated into 10 local languages that
wer e relevant to r each a multitude of residents in the focal cities. The translation pr ocess followed
standar dized methods (cf [
43
]) including a backwar d translation procedur e [
44
]. The final version of
the questionnair e was transferred into a questionnair e version for (a) face-to-face interviews and (b) an
online version.
T able 1.
Overview on the questions and related r esponse and explanatory variables used in the
field survey .
V ariables Question Coding / Scale Remarks
Biodiversity
valuation
(dependent)
How do you like each
of these three
variations of [insert
ecosystem type] ?
V aluation on a 7-point Likert
scale regar ding the general
valuation of three biodiversity
levels; handled as quasi-metric
variable
Assessed in the first, nature-r elated
part of the questionnaire that
employed stimuli material depicting
three levels of plant species richness
in four ecosystem types in five cities;
in-depth analyses of this data with
regar d to di ff erences in biodiversity
valuation in a companion study [ 44 ].
Dog walking
(explanatory)
Do you regularly
walk a dog?
1 = no; 2 = yes as answer
options were translated to
regular dog walkers (r espondent
walks a dog regularly), other
people (respondent does not
walk a dog regularly), N / A
Ecosystem type Park meadow , wasteland, streetscape, for est
Ecosystem type attributed to
questions on dependence of the
stimuli material chosen. All
respondents answer ed the questions
that related to park meadows and to
one of the three r emaining ecosystem
types, respectively .
City Bari, Berlin, Edinburgh, Ljubljana, Malmö Filled in by field survey sta ff
On this basis, data was collected from the period May to August 2015, following standard
pr otocols and by trained sta ff (see [
38
]). W e approached potential interviewees in a range of public and
semi-private settings such as open spaces, administrative o ffi ces, parks, and at o ffi cial cultural events,
in or der to include a wide variety of people that translated to di ff erent sociocultural backgr ounds.
In parallel, we used multiple social media and private networks to collect answers of people via
the online version of the questionnair e. W e constantly reviewed the variation in the sociocultural
backgr ounds of our respondents and adjusted our r ecruitments to include underr epresented gr oups
while we pr oceeded with the study .
2.2. Database
In all, more than 4000 people wer e interviewed, leading to a database used for this study with
3717 entries, excluding some few underage persons or those that did not answer the relevant questions
for this analysis. For the answering of our resear ch questions on potential di ff er ences between people
who r egularly walk dogs or do not, we di ff erentiated our r espondents into two groups with (i) people
that walk a dog r egularly , henceforth “r egular dog walkers” and (ii) those that do not, henceforth

Sustainability 2020 , 12 , 3507 6 of 11
“other people” (explanatory variable), and compar ed how these two groups valued urban natur e
(Figur e 2 ). The underlying item r efers to the question in the second section of the questionnaire, that
r ead “Do you regularly walk a dog?” with answer options “yes” and “no” (see T able 1 ).
W e asked for regular dog walking because we hypothesized that changes in the view of urban
natur e would result in an exposur e to or interaction with urban greenspaces on a r egular basis. W e thus
contrasted r egular dog walkers with people that do not walk dogs at all or perform this activity only
occasionally . As a limitation of our study , we did not define in the survey what r egular dog walking
means, which may leave space to ambiguity . However , we expected a clear di ff er entiation between
self-estimated r egular dog walkers and other people since we anticipated that people who assigned
themselves to the category of r egular dog walkers perform this activity on a daily basis with the same
dog, or at least multiple time per week (e.g., shar ed dog walking in a family). In contrast, the other
gr oup includes people that never or only occasionally walk a dog, e.g., when visiting dog owners
or accompanying a dog-owning person at a single walk. W e did not ask whether people had a dog,
because dog ownership is not necessarily r elated to regular dog walking [ 18 , 19 ].
W e compared how r egular dog walkers and other people valued (a) the four ecosystem types
and (b) the three biodiversity levels within each of these ecosystem types, and (c) these ecosystem
types acr oss five European cities (Figur e 2 ). Our r esponse variables were (a) the mean valuation of
thr ee levels of biodiversity in park meadows, wastelands, streetscapes and for est, respectively (i.e.,
the ecosystem context), (b) the valuation of each level of biodiversity in the very same ecosystem types
(i.e., the biodiversity context), and (c) the mean valuation of each ecosystem type di ff erentiated for
each Eur opean city (i.e., the geographic context). The values were obtained fr om the Likert-scale items
that r eached from low valuation to high valuation of the photographic stimuli material (see above).
For statistical analyses, Likert-scale answers wer e regar ded as quasi-metric variables.
2.3. Statistical Analyses
In a first step, we used Kruskal–W allis tests (function kruskal.test ) to detect significant di ff erences
between r egular dog walkers and other people, with regar d to their mean valuation of biodiversity in
park meadows, wastelands, str eetscapes and forests (i.e., the ecosystem context).
In a second step, we determined with linear models (function lm; see, e.g., [
45
]) whether ther e
ar e significant di ff erences between r egular dog walkers and other people with regar d to their mean
valuation of biodiversity in park meadows, wastelands, streetscapes and for ests, and with regar d to the
geographical context of each r espondent, referring to the five Eur opean cities Bari, Berlin, Edinburgh,
Ljubljana, and Malmö. This step resulted in 4 × 5 models (i.e., the geographic context).
In a thir d step, we used linear models (function lm ) to detect significant di ff er ences between regular
dog walkers and other people with r egard to their valuation of thr ee biodiversity levels (low , medium,
high biodiversity; plus a “no vegetation” valuation scene in streetscapes only) in park meadows,
wastelands, streetscapes and for ests (i.e., 4 models total; the biodiversity context). All statistical
analyses wer e carried out using R (version 3.4.3) in the RSTUDIO environment (version 1.1.383).
3. Results
In all, 569 respondents indicated to be r egular dog walkers, that is, 15% of the sample. Contrary to
what we originally assumed, the r esults do not consistently support the idea that regular dog walkers
value urban gr eenspaces and their biodiversity di ff erently compar ed to other people. However , there
wer e some di ff erences in the thr ee contexts we examined.
3.1. Ecosystem Context
In the ecosystem context, our field survey demonstrates that regular dog walkers valued wild
vegetation in wastelands less than other people, but ther e was no di ff erence between both gr oups for
the valuation of park meadows, the wild vegetation in str eetscapes and urban forests (T able 2 ).

Sustainability 2020 , 12 , 3507 7 of 11
T able 2.
Details of Kruskal–W allis tests that assessed di ff erences in the mean valuation of greenspace
settings between r egular dog walkers and other people, with regar d to the four urban ecosystem types
in all European cities ( N = 3716).
All Cities
Ecosystem T ype n Chi 2 df p
Park meadows 3708 2.212 1 0.137
W astelands 1226 5.109 1 0.024
Streetscapes 1237 1.071 1 0.301
Forests 1240 1.400 1 0.237
3.2. Geographical Context
For the geographical context, our r esults reveal that thr oughout the European cities in our field
survey and acr oss four ecosystem types, respondents fr om both groups valued urban biodiversity
similarly (T able 3 ). W e determined only three di ff er ences in the valuation of r egular dog walkers and
other people: In Bari, there wer e di ff er ences in the valuation of wastelands, as there wer e in Berlin for
park meadows, with r egular dog walkers indicating a lower valuation of the respective gr eenspace
scenes than other people. In Ljubljana, the latter group valued the wild vegetation in tr ee pits higher
than r egular dog walkers. In Edinburgh and Malmö, ther e were no significant di ff er ences between the
valuations of any ecosystem type in the two gr oups of respondents.
T able 3.
Details of linear models that assessed di ff er ences in the mean valuation of greenspace settings
between regular dog walkers and other people, and with r egard to the four urban gr eenspace types
and the five European cities (Bari, Berlin, Edinbur gh, Ljubljana, Malmö). n, number of respondents in
subset; p, p value.
Bari Berlin Edinburgh Ljubljana Malmö
Ecosystem
T ype n F
V alue p n F
V alue p n F
V alue p n F
V alue p n F
V alue p
Park meadows
861
0.086 0.770 1284 5.058
0.024 454
1.73
0.189
549
3.503 0.061
482
1.713 0.191
W astelands 293
8.194
0.005 437
0.001 0.972
149
0.186 0.667
169
0.25
0.618
155
0.047 0.828
Streetscapes 289
0.001 0.970
414
1.156 0.283
150
1.13
0.289
191
5.809
0.017 162
1.219 0.271
Forests 279
0.204 0.652
430
0.018 0.894
154
0.171 0.680
190
0.885 0.348
163 0.0
0.991
3.3. Biodiversity Context
T aking a closer look at the di ff erent biodiversity levels that r espondents were asked to rate,
we found di ff erences between r egular dog walkers and other people only in one out of four models
(T able 4 ). Her e, regular dog walkers valued the high biodiversity level of wastelands lower than other
people. All other biodiversity levels in the four ecosystem types were valued similarly by both gr oups
of r espondents.
T able 4.
Details of the linear models performed for each urban ecosystem type to assess di ff erences
between regular dog walkers and other people, with r egard to the thr ee biodiversity levels within each
urban ecosystem type across all Eur opean cities. In bold are significant p values that dir ectly relate to
our hypothesis, that is, whether there ar e di ff erences between r egular dog walkers or other people.
Ecosystem T ype Coe ffi cients Estimate Standard Error p
Park meadows Intercept 4.404 0.029 < 0.001
Dog walking (yes) − 0.081 0.045 0.07
Biodiversity level (Medium) − 0.001 0.040 0.98
Biodiversity level (High) 0.734 0.040 < 0.001

Sustainability 2020 , 12 , 3507 8 of 11
T able 4. Cont .
Ecosystem T ype Coe ffi cients Estimate Standard Error p
W astelands Inter cept 4.051 0.053 < 0.001
Dog walking (yes) − 0.289 0.084 < 0.001
Biodiversity level (Medium) 0.012 0.073 0.87
Biodiversity level (High) 0.419 0.073 < 0.001
Streetscapes Inter cept 3.969 0.050 < 0.001
Dog walking (yes) − 0.101 0.068 0.13
Biodiversity level (Medium) − 0.105 0.070 0.13
Biodiversity level (High) 0.062 0.070 0.38
Biodiversity level (No vegetation) − 2.154 0.070 < 0.001
Forests Inter cept 4.885 0.047 < 0.001
Dog walking (yes) − 0.098 0.071 0.17
Biodiversity level (Medium) 0.581 0.065 < 0.001
Biodiversity level (High) 0.068 0.065 0.29
4. Discussion
Interactions with natur e elements in cities such as gardening, collecting herbs or visiting parks
engender positive attitudes towar ds nature (e.g., [
5
–
7
]) and likely influence people’s envir onmental
behavior (e.g., [
8
]). Some studies previously stated that dog ownership—a r egular interaction of many
r esidents with urban nature in cities ar ound the globe—positively influences people’s attitudes towards
other animals [
34
,
35
]. T aking this as a starting point, our study tested whether regular dog walkers
r eveal a more positive valuation of urban natur e than other people.
The cor e finding of our cross-national study was that ther e was no support for the central
hypothesis. That is, whether regular dog walker or not, people value gr een open space no matter what
level of species richness. Wher e di ff erences wer e identified (ca. 18% of comparisons) the di ff erences
between dog walkers and others were not consistent among urban ecosystem types, biodiversity levels,
or Eur opean cities (T ables 2 – 4 ).
W e believe that a largely missing e ff ect of r egular dog walking on people’s view on urban natur e is
generalizable: This is, because our study (i) involved a large number of 3717 participants with diverse
sociocultural backgr ounds, including 15% of respondents that r egularly walked dogs, compared to an
average of 23% dog-owning households that existed 2017 in the Eur opean countries we sampled [
46
];
our study (ii) included several types of urban ecosystems suitable for dog walking, ranging fr om
near -natural forests to highly managed str eetscapes; and (iii) stretched over a lar ge geographical scale
in Eur ope, including urban r esidents from the Mediterranean and other parts of Eur ope that have been
shown to di ff er in their view on natur e (e.g., [
46
]). The lack of geographic di ff erentiation is surprising
because studies at the local scale (e.g., a park, a city) suggest that dog walking r elates to the cultural
backgr ound of people—for example, as traditions in the practice of dog walking are missing in some
countries and cultur es [ 47 ].
One explanation for the missing link might be that re gular dog walkers are often focused on their
animals, including dog-induced interactions with other animals or people. For example, it is widely
known that people also visit parks with their dogs to meet other dog walkers, and dogs are a point
of social contact that may act as catalyst [
23
]. Corr espondingly , regular dog walkers might per ceive
the ecosystems visited during dog walking fr om a more social or cultural perspective and less fr om a
natur e-related perspective. This would indicate that for dog walkers, the focus is on the dog or the
community of dog walkers in a park, and not—per se—on the natural surrounding they experience
meanwhile. In parallel, r egular dog walkers may walk their dogs for exer cise in a convenient place
basically; whereas those without a dog may also walk for the sake of exer cise, being in nature, etc.
The limited di ff er ence between dog walkers and others may be that natur e is not always the driving
for ce for people (dog walkers or others) to get out and walk.

Sustainability 2020 , 12 , 3507 9 of 11
5. Conclusions
Fr om our study , we may conclude that dog walkers are not mor e environmentally awar e than
the r est of the population. While dog walking is omnipr esent in cities worldwide, our study does
not support the idea that this human–natur e interaction translates to an increased valuation of urban
natur e. Dog walkers thus do not necessarily repr esent valuable allies for the conservation of urban
natur e. As dog walking can be associated with a range of cultural ecosystem services, but can also
challenge human health and the envir onment (Figure 1 ), policies need to balance these two sides of the
coin. As a practical implication fr om this study , urban policies should continue to develop concepts
that minimize envir onmental impacts of dogs in urban greenspaces while taking into account the
manifold cultural benefits that have been pr oven for dog walkers internationally .
Author Contributions:
Conceptualization, L.K.F . and I.K.; field work supervision and analyses, L.K.F .; writing
and revisions, L.K.F . and I.K. All authors have read and agr eed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding:
This resear ch was funded by the “Gr een Infrastructure and Urban Biodiversity for Sustainable Urban
Development and the Gr een Economy (GREEN SURGE)”, EU FP7 collaborative project, FP7-ENV .2013.6.2-5-603567
(Grant Agreement No. 603567).
Acknowledgments:
W e thank all respondents for their participation and our partners fr om the five European
cities for conducting the field study with us, and Monika Egerer for helpful comments on an earlier version.
W e also thank the academic editor and three anonymous r eviewers for helpful comments on the manuscript.
This publication was supported by the German Resear ch Foundation (DFG) within the funding programme Open
Access Publishing.
Conflicts of Interest:
The authors declar e no conflict of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the
study; in the collection, analyses, or interpr etation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to
publish the results.
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