Sánchez, P.; Pizarro, J.C.; Pauchard, A.; Langdon, B.
Social perceptions on Pinus radiata invasion and the influence of fire occurrence in Central Chile, 2023-2024
This dataset is under embargo and will be made available by 1 November 2025 at the latest Find out more »
Cite this dataset as:
Sánchez, P.; Pizarro, J.C.; Pauchard, A.; Langdon, B. (2025). Social perceptions on Pinus radiata invasion and the influence of fire occurrence in Central Chile, 2023-2024. NERC EDS Environmental Information Data Centre. https://doi.org/10.5285/63e72aa5-6ea3-4e9f-93fa-311605d3d290
Download/Access
This dataset is under embargo and will be made available by 1 November 2025 at the latest Find out more »
https://doi.org/10.5285/63e72aa5-6ea3-4e9f-93fa-311605d3d290
This dataset was constructed to understand the perceptions of respondents about pine tree invasion in three communes in central-southern Chile: Santa Juana, Constitución and Tucapel. In addition, the factors that influence the perception of the species and the interest of each community to participate in community control strategies were identified. Face-to-face interviews were conducted in two communities affected by megafires (Santa Juana and Constitución) and one community not affected by such an event (Tucapel), in order to check if there are differences in the willingness of the respondents.
The variables evaluated include:
(a) demographic data; with information on location, gender, education, age, economic activities and sectors of the respondents;
(b) beliefs; whether they think that alien species damage the ecosystem; benefit people; and whether they think that the pine tree harms the traditions of the community;
(c) what uses they give to wild pine trees; as fuel, construction material, economic, recreational and cultural purposes;
(d) relationship between pine trees and forest fires; if they think that wild pine favours intense and frequent fires, if all vegetation has the same fire risk, and if they think that pine trees can grow back easily after fires, and
(e) responsibilities associated with management; if they have ever controlled wild pine in their sector, personal, community, business and government responsibilities associated with management, and how likely they are to participate in strategies to control wild pine.
Data were collected between November 2023 and January 2024.
The variables evaluated include:
(a) demographic data; with information on location, gender, education, age, economic activities and sectors of the respondents;
(b) beliefs; whether they think that alien species damage the ecosystem; benefit people; and whether they think that the pine tree harms the traditions of the community;
(c) what uses they give to wild pine trees; as fuel, construction material, economic, recreational and cultural purposes;
(d) relationship between pine trees and forest fires; if they think that wild pine favours intense and frequent fires, if all vegetation has the same fire risk, and if they think that pine trees can grow back easily after fires, and
(e) responsibilities associated with management; if they have ever controlled wild pine in their sector, personal, community, business and government responsibilities associated with management, and how likely they are to participate in strategies to control wild pine.
Data were collected between November 2023 and January 2024.
Publication date: 2025-04-28
99 views *
View numbers valid from 28 April 2025 (information prior to this was not collected)
Format
Comma-separated values (CSV)
Spatial information
Study area
Spatial representation type
Triangular irregular network
Spatial reference system
WGS 84
Temporal information
Temporal extent
2023-11-01 to 2024-01-31
Provenance & quality
Face-to-face interviews were conducted, with 62 surveys collected in Santa Juana, 78 in Constitución, and 80 in Tucapel, making a total of 220 surveys.
ArcGIS and Google Earth Pro were utilized to select populated rural sectors. The areas visited represent different rural areas of each commune where people over 18 were invited to participate in the survey. To prevent any bias, neutral language was used when approaching the species, and the survey instrument was approved by the ethics committee of the Universidad de Concepción (CEBB 1567-2023).
ArcGIS and Google Earth Pro were utilized to select populated rural sectors. The areas visited represent different rural areas of each commune where people over 18 were invited to participate in the survey. To prevent any bias, neutral language was used when approaching the species, and the survey instrument was approved by the ethics committee of the Universidad de Concepción (CEBB 1567-2023).
Licensing and constraints
This dataset is under embargo and will be made available by 1 November 2025 at the latest Find out more »
This dataset will be available under the terms of the Open Government Licence
Cite this dataset as:
Sánchez, P.; Pizarro, J.C.; Pauchard, A.; Langdon, B. (2025). Social perceptions on Pinus radiata invasion and the influence of fire occurrence in Central Chile, 2023-2024. NERC EDS Environmental Information Data Centre. https://doi.org/10.5285/63e72aa5-6ea3-4e9f-93fa-311605d3d290
Related
This dataset is included in the following collections
Correspondence/contact details
Authors
Sánchez, P.
Universidad de Concepción
Other contacts
Rights holder
Universidad de Concepción
Custodian
NERC EDS Environmental Information Data Centre
info@eidc.ac.uk
Publisher
NERC EDS Environmental Information Data Centre
info@eidc.ac.uk