Abstract

Facilitating voluntary conservation on private lands is a crucial element of policies that seek to mitigate forest habitat loss and fragmentation around the world. Previous research emphasizes the role of social factors (e.g., landowner characteristics, economics) in forest management, but environmental outcomes of past management can also affect landowner decisions. Our objective was to evaluate how positive outcomes for wildlife and habitat might reinforce or amplify landowner efforts to manage forest habitats. We applied the lens of coupled human and natural systems to investigate private lands management for early successional forests, which are declining along with associated wildlife in rural areas of the eastern U.S. Efforts to restore early successional forest in this region involve active forest management to create patches of successional forest in native, mature mixed hardwood stands. By integrating field-based monitoring of wildlife with surveys of landowner perceptions, we examined how landowners observed, interpreted, and responded to property-scale ecological outcomes of forest management. We recorded presence of Golden-winged Warbler (Vermivora chrysoptera) and American Woodcock (Scolopax minor) and estimated bird species richness in spring 2015 and/or 2016 on private properties located in the Appalachians (Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania) and Upper Great Lakes (Minnesota, Wisconsin). These properties were enrolled in early successional forest management programs administered through the Natural Resources Conservation Service. Bird surveys were paired with landowner responses to a telephone survey conducted from January to May 2017 (n = 102). Most (71.6–81.6%) landowners’ perceptions of avian presence on their properties matched monitoring results. These perceptions were informed by personal observations and by outreach from agency partners and field technicians. Landowners who already completed their conservation program contracts (n = 85) continued managing early successional forests. Continued management for early successional habitat was positively associated with perceived benefits to birds, forest health, and scenery. Our findings give insight into how private landowners respond to environmental effects of forest management. We conclude that positive environmental outcomes of these conservation programs are related to continued early successional forest conservation by private landowners.

Highlights

  • While the coupled human and natural systems (CHANS) model focused on birds, we investigated landowner perceptions management effectiveness

  • While the CHANS model focused on birds, we investigated of other outcomes related to early successional forest management including forest health, scenery, landowner perceptions of other outcomes related to early successional forest management including and hunting

  • These properties were enrolled in Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) conservation programs for early successional successional forest management, and had been managed for early successional forest habitat between forest management, and had been managed for early successional forest habitat between 2012 and 2016

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Summary

Introduction

Private ownership of forests is most common in wealthier countries such as the United States, where about 58 percent of forested land is privately owned [1,2]. Decisions of private landowners can profoundly affect forest ecosystems and associated wildlife. This is especially true in contexts where active management is required to meet the specialized needs of species of conservation concern. Private decisions about forest management have significant consequences for early-successional forests in the eastern United States, in rural areas of the Appalachians, Great Lakes, and Northeast regions. Successional forest sites have high plant species productivity and provide ecologically important structural complexity for forest ecosystems [4]. Altered disturbance regimes and reduced timber harvesting over the past century have caused widespread declines in early-successional habitat and an increase in even-aged, mature forest stands [5,6,7]

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