Abstract

State wildlife management agencies in the United States have depended on a “user-pay” funding model for conservation efforts that relies on revenue from hunting license sales and a federal excise tax on firearms, ammunition, and archery equipment. Declines in hunting participation, however, jeopardize sustainability of the current funding model. Ensuring support among stakeholders for wildlife management and conservation may require expanding sources of funding and incorporating the perspectives and values of a diversifying constituency into decision making processes. We used a web-based survey of wildlife-associated recreationists in Michigan, USA to evaluate support for a range of conservation funding policies. Respondents self-identified primarily as hunters (n = 2,558) or wildlife watchers (n = 942). We used binary logistic regression to evaluate support for four conservation funding policy options: state sales tax, lottery proceeds, extractive industry revenue, and a user-based tax on outdoor gear (i.e., “backpack tax”). Determinants of support varied by type of policy and stakeholder characteristics. We found no statistically significant differences between hunters and wildlife watchers in their support for conservation funding policies when accounting for other variables such as wildlife value orientations, engagement in stewardship behaviors, age, and gender. The industry-based policy achieved the greatest level of approval, while the backpack tax had the lowest. Respondents were mixed in their support of the sales tax and lottery proceeds options. Cluster analysis revealed three homogenous groups related to conservation funding policies: “strong support,” “mixed/opposed,” and “anti-backpack tax.” Clusters differed in their support for conservation funding policies and on psychological and demographic variables. The “strong support” and “anti-backpack tax” groups differed in their levels of stewardship engagement, knowledge of conservation funding mechanisms, and support for the backpack tax option. The “mixed-opposed” group tended to be older, less educated, and less likely to be a member of a conservation organization. Results suggest support for conservation funding differs by policy type and social and psychological characteristics of stakeholders. Based on differences in policy support revealed in this study, we suggest a multi-tiered approach to funding conservation and building on support among wildlife stakeholders to mitigate the looming funding crisis for state wildlife agencies.

Highlights

  • Contemporary threats to biodiversity include global impacts stemming from climate change, population growth, land use changes, development, and geopolitical conflict, leading to significant risks for wildlife species and habitats [Leemans and de Groot, 2003; Male and Bean, 2005; Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), 2019]

  • Monetary contributions from hunters primarily are generated through state hunting license sales and a federal excise tax on hunting equipment, ammunition, and archery equipment (Williams, 2010; Duda et al, 2021)

  • Hunting participation has declined in many states, with repercussions for wildlife management and conservation efforts (Winkler and Warnke, 2013; Echols et al, 2019)

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Summary

Introduction

Contemporary threats to biodiversity include global impacts stemming from climate change, population growth, land use changes, development, and geopolitical conflict, leading to significant risks for wildlife species and habitats [Leemans and de Groot, 2003; Male and Bean, 2005; Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), 2019]. Monetary contributions from hunters primarily are generated through state hunting license sales and a federal excise tax on hunting equipment, ammunition, and archery equipment (Williams, 2010; Duda et al, 2021). Other nature-based activities have gained participants as well, such as hiking, camping, mountain biking, and kayaking, leading to an evolving mix of recreational practices and demographically diverse sets of users (Cordell, 2012) Practitioners such as trust managers in state wildlife agencies face an unfamiliar demographic landscape as users of public lands become more ethnically diverse, urbanized, and protectionist in their orientations toward wildlife and interactions with nature than previous consumptive interests (Teel and Manfredo, 2010). Combined with state hunting license sales, these became the primary mechanisms for generating the states’ funds for habitat management and acquisition (Organ et al, 2012)

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