Abstract

Abstract Conflicts between the objectives of agricultural production and conservation are becoming increasingly complex. Of vital importance to the success of conflict interventions is a detailed understanding of how stakeholders react to management interventions as well as the influence of interacting social and political factors. Across Europe, goose populations have increased considerably, leading to widespread impacts on agriculture and significant conflicts between different stakeholder groups. We used a novel experimental game to understand farmer preferences regarding the design of goose conflict interventions in Scotland. We specifically examined how three alternative interventions (government financial support for scaring activities, subsidies and agglomeration payments that include bonus payments for adoption by neighbouring farms) affect farmer propensity to support goose conservation interests through reduced shooting and the provision of sacrificial crops. We also examined the links between within‐game behaviour and real‐life attributes and attitudes of farmers. We found that all three interventions were conducive to pro‐conservation behaviour in the games. The effects of all three interventions were stronger among farmers who had higher trust towards other community members. Agglomeration payments led to increased provision of sacrificial crops among farmers with negative attitudes towards the current allocation of goose finances in Scotland. Farmers with more positive attitudes towards wildlife tourism were more likely to provide more sacrificial crops, and less likely to shoot in the games. Farmers' real‐life traits had a statistically significant but marginal impact on the effectiveness of financial payments, such as the number of geese being shot on their own lands, remoteness and crop damage by geese. These game results provide evidence for the potential of innovative financial instruments in conflict management and their interactions with social factors such as community trust, equity attitude and real‐life shooting levels. Our study highlights the importance of socio‐political elements in fostering mutually beneficial outcomes in conservation conflicts in addition to addressing material losses to wildlife. We also show how games can help in addressing conservation conflicts in a wide range of settings. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.

Highlights

  • Conflicts over natural resources and conservation are widespread in many parts of the world (Hill et al, 2017; Redpath et al, 2015; Woodroffe et al, 2005)

  • These conflicts are increasingly being understood as conflicts between different stakeholder groups who disagree over the management of wildlife or natural resources (Hill, 2015; Peterson et al, 2010; Redpath et al, 2015)

  • We developed a spatially explicit and dynamic experimental game to investigate farmer willingness to support goose conservation actions, and the factors that are conducive to pro-goose interventions

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Conflicts over natural resources and conservation are widespread in many parts of the world (Hill et al, 2017; Redpath et al, 2015; Woodroffe et al, 2005). We examined (a) the effect of various goose conflict interventions on game decisions (i.e. limited shooting and provision of sacrificial crops for geese) and (b) the links between within-game behaviour and farmer characteristics (e.g. socio-demographics, real-life experiences of damage by geese, number of geese shot on farms) and attitudes (e.g. attitudes towards various goose management schemes and features, institutional and interpersonal trust). Using Goosebumps, we tested the effect of three conflict interventions on farmer decisions: (a) financial and material support for scaring; (b) flat rate subsidy for sacrificial crops and (c) agglomeration payments that encourage spatial coordination of sacrificial crops.

| METHODS
Findings
Sacrificial crops
Full Text
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