Department of Forest Resources and Environmental Conservation, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia 24060, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2013 Jul;23(5):1146-55. doi: 10.1890/12-1878.1.
Engaging private landowners in conservation activities for imperiled species is critical to maintaining and enhancing biodiversity. Market-based approaches can incentivize conservation behaviors on private lands by shifting the benefit-cost ratio of engaging in activities that result in net conservation benefits for target species. In the United States and elsewhere, voluntary conservation agreements with financial incentives are becoming an increasingly common strategy. While the influence of program design and delivery of voluntary conservation programs is often overlooked, these aspects are critical to achieving the necessary participation to attain landscape-scale outcomes. Using a sample of family-forest landowners in the southeast United States, we show how preferences for participation in a conservation program to protect an at-risk species, the gopher tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus), are related to program structure, delivery, and perceived efficacy. Landowners were most sensitive to programs that are highly controlling, require permanent conservation easements, and put landowners at risk for future regulation. Programs designed with greater levels of compensation and that support landowners' autonomy to make land management decisions can increase participation and increase landowner acceptance of program components that are generally unfavorable, like long-term contracts and permanent easements. There is an inherent trade-off between maximizing participation and maximizing the conservation benefits when designing a conservation incentive program. For conservation programs targeting private lands to achieve landscape-level benefits, they must attract a critical level of participation that creates a connected mosaic of conservation benefits. Yet, programs with attributes that strive to maximize conservation benefits within a single agreement (and reduce risks of failure) are likely to have lower participation, and thus lower landscape benefits. Achieving levels of landowner participation in conservation agreement programs that deliver lasting, landscape-level benefits requires careful attention not only to how the program structure influences potential conservation benefits, but also how it influences landowners and their potential to participate.
让私人土地所有者参与保护濒危物种的活动对于维护和增强生物多样性至关重要。基于市场的方法可以通过改变参与活动的效益成本比,激励私人土地上的保护行为,从而为目标物种带来净保护效益。在美国和其他地方,带有经济激励的自愿保护协议正成为一种越来越普遍的策略。虽然自愿保护计划的设计和实施的影响往往被忽视,但这些方面对于实现必要的参与以实现景观规模的成果至关重要。利用美国东南部的一个家庭森林所有者样本,我们展示了对参与保护易危物种——穴龟(Gopherus polyphemus)的保护计划的偏好如何与计划结构、实施和感知效果相关。土地所有者对高度控制、要求永久保护地役权和使土地所有者面临未来监管风险的计划最为敏感。设计补偿水平更高且支持土地所有者自主做出土地管理决策的计划可以增加参与度,并提高土地所有者对普遍不利的计划要素的接受度,如长期合同和永久地役权。在设计保护激励计划时,最大限度地提高参与度和最大限度地提高保护效益之间存在内在的权衡。对于以私人土地为目标以实现景观效益的保护计划,它们必须吸引到足够的参与度,以创造出一个具有保护效益的相互连接的马赛克景观。然而,那些试图在单个协议内最大化保护效益(并降低失败风险)的计划可能参与度较低,从而景观效益也较低。要实现保护协议计划中能带来持久、景观效益的土地所有者参与度,不仅需要仔细关注计划结构如何影响潜在的保护效益,还需要关注它如何影响土地所有者及其参与的潜力。