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Understanding conservation decisions of agriculture producers
Author(s) -
Sweikert Lily A.,
Gigliotti Larry M.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the journal of wildlife management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 111
eISSN - 1937-2817
pISSN - 0022-541X
DOI - 10.1002/jwmg.21643
Subject(s) - wildlife , wildlife conservation , agriculture , business , environmental resource management , scale (ratio) , land use , conservation agriculture , environmental planning , geography , engineering , economics , ecology , cartography , archaeology , biology , civil engineering
Most land in the United States is privately owned and used for agriculture. To address the effect of agriculture on wildlife, conservation professionals and organizations need to understand the land use decisions made by farmers and ranchers. We developed a tool for categorizing farmers and ranchers by their conservation land use values (LUVs) to understand how those values affect their land use motivations and resultant decisions. We defined land as the whole natural environment including soil, water, plants, fish, and wildlife. We used principal axis factoring and reliability analysis to identify statements representing human‐centered values and nature‐centered values of farmers and ranchers. We tested the validity of the combined statements with a survey of South Dakota's private landowners ( n = 4,000, Jan through May 2016), resulting in the LUV scale. Crossing the average scores on the human‐centered and nature‐centered statements identified 4 LUV types: humans first (20%), nature first (29%), interconnected (29%), and disconnected (22%). Analysis of variance and chi‐square tests showed that, compared to the humans first and disconnected LUV types, the nature first and interconnected LUV types reported significantly greater importance of the following: most categories of wildlife in their land use decisions, conservation‐related motivations for participating in a United States Farm Bill Conservation Program, conservation‐related motivations for land use decisions, and participation in conservation‐related behaviors. Conservation professionals and organizations can use the LUV scale to better understand landowners’ land use decisions to evaluate and inform conservation policy, programs, messaging, and improve conservation outcomes. © 2019 The Wildlife Society.