| Literature DB >> 22525987 |
A Paige Fischer1, Susan Charnley.
Abstract
Managing natural processes at the landscape scale to promote forest health is important, especially in the case of wildfire, where the ability of a landowner to protect his or her individual parcel is constrained by conditions on neighboring ownerships. However, management at a landscape scale is also challenging because it requires cooperation on plans and actions that cross ownership boundaries. Cooperation depends on people's beliefs and norms about reciprocity and perceptions of the risks and benefits of interacting with others. Using logistic regression tests on mail survey data and qualitative analysis of interviews with landowners, we examined the relationship between perceived wildfire risk and cooperation in the management of hazardous fuel by nonindustrial private forest (NIPF) owners in fire-prone landscapes of eastern Oregon. We found that NIPF owners who perceived a risk of wildfire to their properties, and perceived that conditions on nearby public forestlands contributed to this risk, were more likely to have cooperated with public agencies in the past to reduce fire risk than owners who did not perceive a risk of wildfire to their properties. Wildfire risk perception was not associated with past cooperation among NIPF owners. The greater social barriers to private-private cooperation than to private-public cooperation, and perceptions of more hazardous conditions on public compared with private forestlands may explain this difference. Owners expressed a strong willingness to cooperate with others in future cross-boundary efforts to reduce fire risk, however. We explore barriers to cooperative forest management across ownerships, and identify models of cooperation that hold potential for future collective action to reduce wildfire risk.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22525987 PMCID: PMC3350635 DOI: 10.1007/s00267-012-9848-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Manage ISSN: 0364-152X Impact factor: 3.266
Fig. 1Study area showing nonindustrial private forest and public ownership and case–study locations
Characteristics of survey sample (n = 505)
| Female (percentage) | 20.4 |
| Bachelor’s degree (percentage) | 51.7 |
| Earn at least U.S. median income of $50 K (percentage) | 73.5 |
| Age (mean) | 63.1 |
| Use parcel as primary residence (percentage) | 25.5 |
| Distance of parcel from primary residence in miles (median) | 75.0 |
| Most important management goal is “residence” (percentage) | 20.0 |
| Years parcel owned (mean) | 21.7 |
| Parcel acreage (median) | 392.0 |
| Ownership acreage (median) | 540.0 |
| Treated acres to reduce risk of fire (percentage) | 70.0 |
| Acres treated (median) | 20.0 |
Variables used in logistic regression tests
| Variable | Type | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Cooperated with public agencies | Dichotomous response | Worked with public agencies to plan, pay for, or conduct practices that can reduce hazardous fuel on their parcels: 1 if yes; 0 otherwise |
| Cooperated with private owners | Dichotomous response | Worked with other private owners to plan, pay for, or conduct practices that can reduce hazardous fuel on their parcels: 1 if yes; 0 otherwise |
| Willing to cooperate with public agencies | Dichotomous response | Willing to work with public land neighbors to reduce fuel with the expectation that cooperation will fulfill at least one of the following conditions: (a) reduce treatment costs, (b) increase acreage treated, (c) make more equipment available, (d) make more funding available, (e) make more training and education available, or (f) provide an exemption from legal liability for escaped fires: 1 if yes; 0 otherwise |
| Willing to cooperate with private owners | Dichotomous response | Willing to work with private land neighbors to reduce fuel with the expectation that cooperation will fulfill at least one of the following conditions: (a) reduce treatment costs, (b) increase acreage treated, (c) make more equipment available, (d) make more funding available, (e) make more training and education available, or (f) provide an exemption from legal liability for escaped fires: 1 if yes; 0 otherwise |
| Concerned about fire occurring on parcel | Dichotomous explanatory | Five-point scale of concern about wildfire occurring on parcel: 1 if concerned or very concerned; 0 if not at all concerned, slightly concerned or moderately concerned |
| Concerned about hazard on nearby public land | Dichotomous explanatory | Five-point scale of concern about conditions on nearby public land contributing to the chance of wildfire on parcel: 1 if concerned or very concerned; 0 if not at all concerned, slightly concerned or moderately concerned |
| Concerned about hazard on nearby private land | Dichotomous explanatory | Five-point scale of concern about conditions on nearby private land contributing to the chance of wildfire on parcel: 1 if concerned or very concerned; 0 if not at all concerned, slightly concerned or moderately concerned |
| Aware of local fire ecology | Dichotomous explanatory | Agree with statement “wildfire can help maintain open, park-like conditions that are characteristic of ponderosa pine forests”: 1 if yes; 0 otherwise. |
| Experienced a fire on parcel | Dichotomous explanatory | Experienced a wildfire on parcel, or lost trees of value, or lost structures, or lost a home to a wildfire on parcel: 1 if yes; 0 otherwise |
Fig. 2Property boundary: private on left, public on right
Management practices of sample (n = 505)
| Management practice | Percentage of respondents who conducted practice on their parcel between 2003 and 2008 |
|---|---|
| Burned material in piles | 65.5 |
| Grazed livestock | 65.5 |
| Thinned by hand or chainsaw | 64.6 |
| Pruned or limbed up trees | 60.9 |
| Cleared around structures | 50.2 |
| Created fuel breaks | 48.1 |
| Made structures more fire proof | 42.1 |
| Pulled plants, brush or trees by hand | 41.0 |
| Mulched, spread or left material in the forest | 38.3 |
| Thinned with mechanized equipment | 36.4 |
| Mowed, crushed, ground or chipped | 33.5 |
| Applied herbicides | 32.0 |
| Harvested timber for profit | 28.7 |
| Understory burned | 21.8 |
| Sold logs for profit | 19.9 |
| Sold wood products for profit | 12.1 |
| Planted fire-adapted trees | 11.1 |
| Took material to landfill | 7.5 |
Past cooperation in forest management activities (n = 505)
| Arrangement | Percentage of respondents who used arrangement |
|---|---|
| Only on one’s own or with family members | 35.0 |
| With public agencies, other private owners or nonprofit groups | 41.2 |
| With public agencies (e.g. ODF, BLM, NRCS)… | 33.8 |
| With private forest owners (e.g. neighbors)… | 17.8 |
| With nonprofit groups (e.g. watershed councils)… | 14.8 |
| With private contractors | 41.0 |
Willingness to cooperate with other owners in the future (public or private) to reduce fire risk (n = 505)
| Conditions under which respondents are willing to cooperate with other owners | Percentage of respondents willing to cooperate with other public or private owners under condition | |
|---|---|---|
| Public owners | Private owners | |
| Cooperation reduces liability | 61.0 | 65.8 |
| Cooperation reduces cost | 53.9 | 58.6 |
| Cooperation makes more public funding available | 53.1 | 56.0 |
| Cooperation makes equipment available | 49.2 | 50.6 |
| Cooperation increases acreage | 49.2 | 49.6 |
| Cooperation makes more training and education available | 39.0 | 38.8 |
| At least one of the above | 67.7 | 74.7 |
Logistic regression predicting influences on cooperation (frequencies in parentheses)
| Dependent variables | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cooperated with public agencies (33.9) | Cooperated with private owners (17.8) | Willing to cooperate with public agencies (67.7) | Willing to cooperate with private owners (74.7) | |||||
| Independent variables |
| Exp(B) |
| Exp(B) |
| Exp(B) |
| Exp(B) |
| Concerned about fire occurring on parcel (67.3) | .012 | 1.941 | .815 | .935 | .048 | 1.638 | .218 | 1.387 |
| Concerned about hazard on nearby public land (53.5) | .068 | 1.559 | .311 | 1.335 | .000 | 2.810 | .214 | 1.396 |
| Concerned about hazard on nearby private land (37.4) | .558 | .867 | .795 | .928 | .026 | .551 | .203 | 1.447 |
| Aware of local fire ecology (65.5) | .049 | 1.621 | .240 | 1.402 | .005 | 1.959 | .010 | 1.903 |
| Experienced a fire on parcel (39.0) | .001 | 1.987 | .659 | .893 | .430 | .834 | .890 | 1.035 |
| Constant | .000 | .130 | .000 | .175 | .662 | .893 | .282 | 1.336 |
| Model χ2 = 31.194, Nagelkerke | Model χ2 = 5.728, Nagelkerke | Model χ2 = 29.973, Nagelkerke | Model χ2 = 17.278, Nagelkerke | |||||
NIPF organizational membership (n = 505)
| Types of organizations | Percentage of respondents who said they belonged |
|---|---|
| Forestry organizations (OSWA, Society of American Foresters, etc…) | 14.4 |
| Fire fighting organizations (e.g. Forest Protective Associations) | 18.4 |
| Outdoor organizations (hunting clubs, fishing clubs, etc…) | 24.5 |
| Environmental organizations (Sierra Club, The Nature Conservancy, etc…) | 18.8 |
| Property or landowner’s association | 16.2 |
| Other similar organizations | 4.6 |
| An organization in at least one of the above categories | 52.1 |