Motivations to leave coarse woody debris in private forests: a survey based study

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftKonferenceabstrakt i tidsskriftForskning

Standard

Motivations to leave coarse woody debris in private forests : a survey based study. / Boon, Tove Enggrob; Meilby, Henrik; Andersen, Anne Sofie Kirkegaard.

I: Scandinavian Forest Economics, Bind 45, 2014, s. 59.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftKonferenceabstrakt i tidsskriftForskning

Harvard

Boon, TE, Meilby, H & Andersen, ASK 2014, 'Motivations to leave coarse woody debris in private forests: a survey based study', Scandinavian Forest Economics, bind 45, s. 59.

APA

Boon, T. E., Meilby, H., & Andersen, A. S. K. (2014). Motivations to leave coarse woody debris in private forests: a survey based study. Scandinavian Forest Economics, 45, 59.

Vancouver

Boon TE, Meilby H, Andersen ASK. Motivations to leave coarse woody debris in private forests: a survey based study. Scandinavian Forest Economics. 2014;45:59.

Author

Boon, Tove Enggrob ; Meilby, Henrik ; Andersen, Anne Sofie Kirkegaard. / Motivations to leave coarse woody debris in private forests : a survey based study. I: Scandinavian Forest Economics. 2014 ; Bind 45. s. 59.

Bibtex

@article{9be85183561a4a6c8705a67ed1ea5f37,
title = "Motivations to leave coarse woody debris in private forests: a survey based study",
abstract = "There is a decline of biodiversity in Europe. Following the Biodiversity Convention (1992) EU countries, including Denmark, have agreed to a common EU 2020 target to halt the loss of biodiversity. In Denmark, forests play a major role for biodiversity conservation, as forests cover 14 % of the land area and half of the red listed species belong to forests. Of the forest area, 71 % is owned by private owners. Hereby private forest owners are key players in providing for biodiversity conservation in forests. But, what motivates the owner to take biodiversity conservation measures, with the possible costs and benefits incurred? Based on the theory of planned behaviour, the aim of this study is to investigate forest owners{\textquoteright} motivation to integrate nature concerns in forest management. As criteria for choosing a relevant case, we looked for a measure that has a potential to significantly improve biodiversity, has political attention, is tangible, constitutes something any forest owner can do even on a small area of land, involves potential trade-offs with other management goals, and, preferably something that most forest owners and their personal network would have an opinion about.Based on these criteria, we selected the case of leaving coarse woody debris on the forest floor. A survey questionnaire was designed and sent to 1434 private forest owners in Denmark, 686 of whom answered. The presentation includes the first results of the analysis.",
author = "Boon, {Tove Enggrob} and Henrik Meilby and Andersen, {Anne Sofie Kirkegaard}",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
volume = "45",
pages = "59",
journal = "Scandinavian Forest Economics",
issn = "0355-032X",
note = "null ; Conference date: 21-05-2014 Through 24-05-2014",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Motivations to leave coarse woody debris in private forests

AU - Boon, Tove Enggrob

AU - Meilby, Henrik

AU - Andersen, Anne Sofie Kirkegaard

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - There is a decline of biodiversity in Europe. Following the Biodiversity Convention (1992) EU countries, including Denmark, have agreed to a common EU 2020 target to halt the loss of biodiversity. In Denmark, forests play a major role for biodiversity conservation, as forests cover 14 % of the land area and half of the red listed species belong to forests. Of the forest area, 71 % is owned by private owners. Hereby private forest owners are key players in providing for biodiversity conservation in forests. But, what motivates the owner to take biodiversity conservation measures, with the possible costs and benefits incurred? Based on the theory of planned behaviour, the aim of this study is to investigate forest owners’ motivation to integrate nature concerns in forest management. As criteria for choosing a relevant case, we looked for a measure that has a potential to significantly improve biodiversity, has political attention, is tangible, constitutes something any forest owner can do even on a small area of land, involves potential trade-offs with other management goals, and, preferably something that most forest owners and their personal network would have an opinion about.Based on these criteria, we selected the case of leaving coarse woody debris on the forest floor. A survey questionnaire was designed and sent to 1434 private forest owners in Denmark, 686 of whom answered. The presentation includes the first results of the analysis.

AB - There is a decline of biodiversity in Europe. Following the Biodiversity Convention (1992) EU countries, including Denmark, have agreed to a common EU 2020 target to halt the loss of biodiversity. In Denmark, forests play a major role for biodiversity conservation, as forests cover 14 % of the land area and half of the red listed species belong to forests. Of the forest area, 71 % is owned by private owners. Hereby private forest owners are key players in providing for biodiversity conservation in forests. But, what motivates the owner to take biodiversity conservation measures, with the possible costs and benefits incurred? Based on the theory of planned behaviour, the aim of this study is to investigate forest owners’ motivation to integrate nature concerns in forest management. As criteria for choosing a relevant case, we looked for a measure that has a potential to significantly improve biodiversity, has political attention, is tangible, constitutes something any forest owner can do even on a small area of land, involves potential trade-offs with other management goals, and, preferably something that most forest owners and their personal network would have an opinion about.Based on these criteria, we selected the case of leaving coarse woody debris on the forest floor. A survey questionnaire was designed and sent to 1434 private forest owners in Denmark, 686 of whom answered. The presentation includes the first results of the analysis.

M3 - Conference abstract in journal

VL - 45

SP - 59

JO - Scandinavian Forest Economics

JF - Scandinavian Forest Economics

SN - 0355-032X

Y2 - 21 May 2014 through 24 May 2014

ER -

ID: 130759595