“…Cultural landscapes and social-ecological change in the Valles Occidentales of the Aragonese Pyrenees The Valles Occidentales of the Central Aragonese Pyrenees, like many European mountain landscapes, have a long history of human habitation, use, and management, leading to an anthropogenic ecosystem largely created and until recently maintained by human activity: cultivation, extensive livestock grazing, wood-cutting, and burning (Puigdefábregas and Fillat 1986, Garcia-Gonzalez et al 1990, García-Ruiz and LasantaMartinez 1990, 1993, Lasanta-Martinez et al 2005, García-Martínez et al 2009). The Valles are a cultural landscape in the sense described by Rössler (2006:334), "at the interface between nature and culture, tangible and intangible heritage, biological and cultural diversity-they represent a closely woven net of relationships, the essence of culture and people's identity.…”