Abstract

The effective implementation and development of conservation schemes to which participation of forest owners is voluntary, requires an understanding of forest owners’ views on measures to safeguard forest biodiversity. The Forest Biodiversity Program for Southern Finland is currently the most important instrument of voluntary forest conservation in Finland. The aim of this study is to explore what kind of methods the forest owners are willing to implement to safeguard biodiversity in their own forests and to identify forest owner groups based on these views. The aim is also to compare forest owners’ values, attitudes, endorsement of an ecological worldview and objectives for forest ownership as well as the background characteristics in these groups. The data were collected in 2015, by a nationwide mail survey sent to 3000 Finnish family forest owners (n = 1035). Five forest owner types were identified: Conservationists, Moderate conservationists, Compensation oriented, Promoters of biodiversity through forest management and Uninterested. Previous experience of implementation of voluntary measures to safeguard biodiversity and positive attitudes towards conservation were important in explaining the willingness to adopt conservation measures. The results can be utilized in developing voluntary conservation programs and in targeting advisory services related to biodiversity protection to different forest owner groups more accurately. The results support the need for flexible voluntary conservation programs, including a large variety of mechanisms to protect nature values in family owned forests.

Highlights

  • Measures to safeguard biodiversity have become more diverse in recent decades (Mayer and Tikka 2006; Kauneckis 2009; Hanley et al 2012)

  • The results suggest that willingness to implement measures to safeguard forest biodiversity seems to be at least partly value-driven

  • That would make the implementation of conservation measures more vulnerable to possible changes in contract terms

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Summary

Introduction

Measures to safeguard biodiversity have become more diverse in recent decades (Mayer and Tikka 2006; Kauneckis 2009; Hanley et al 2012). The Forest Biodiversity Program for Southern Finland (METSO) is currently the most important instrument of voluntary forest conservation in Finland (Anonymous 2014). In Finland the main goal of the METSO Program is to stop the decline of forest biodiversity (Anonymous 2014). Forest owners can voluntarily offer a forest site to be protected in the METSO Program either with a fixed-term contract or permanently and receive monetary compensation. In the METSO Program cooperation between landowners and authorities in the implementation of the measures is an important aspect (Anonymous 2014)

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