| Literature DB >> 26514123 |
Sarah Varble1, Silvia Secchi2, Caroline Gottschalk Druschke3.
Abstract
Tenants and part-owners are farming an increasing number of acres in the United States, while full-owners are farming fewer acres. This shift in ownership is a potential cause for concern because some previous research indicated that tenant and part-owner farmers were less likely to adopt conservation practices than farmers who owned the land they farmed. If that trend persists, ownership changes would signal a national drop in conservation adoption. Here we examine this issue using a survey of agricultural operators in the Clear Creek watershed in Iowa, a state with intensive agricultural production. We compare adoption of conservation practices, and preferences for conservation information sources and communication channels, between farmers who rent some portion of the land they farm (tenants and part-owners) and farmers who own all of the land they farm (full-owners). We find that renters are more likely to practice conservation tillage than full-owners, though they are less likely to rotate crops. In addition, renters report using federal government employees (specifically, Natural Resource Conservation Service and Farm Service Agency) as their primary sources of conservation information, while full-owners most frequently rely on neighbors, friends, and County Extension. These findings are significant for conservation policy because, unlike some past research, they indicate that renters are not resistant to all types of conservation practices, echoing recent studies finding an increase in conservation adoption among non-full-owners. Our results emphasize the importance of government conservation communication and can inform outreach efforts by helping tailor effective, targeted conservation strategies for owners and renters.Entities:
Keywords: Communication; Conservation outreach; Conservation practice adoption; Farmland tenure
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26514123 PMCID: PMC4712228 DOI: 10.1007/s00267-015-0619-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Manage ISSN: 0364-152X Impact factor: 3.266
Fig. 1Iowa 1982–2012: number of farms and average farm size
Fig. 2%Cash rent per revenue per bushel and average land sales prices (Iowa County, IA)
Fig. 3Clear Creek location and land use
Descriptive statistics about land ownership and rentership
| Descriptive variable | Variable coding | Full-owners | Part-owners and tenants |
|---|---|---|---|
| Education | 1 = some high school or less, 2 = high school diploma, 3 = vocational or tech diploma, 4 = some college but no degree, 5 = bachelor degree, 6 = graduate degree | 3.63 | 3.41 |
| Gross agricultural income | 1 = $1–24,999 | 1.83 | 3.02 |
| %Household income from farming | 1 = 1–25 % | 1.74 | 2.42 |
| Tillable acres owned | 235.24 | 201.19 | |
| Own acres farmed | 131.20 | 211.44 | |
| Leased acres farmed | 0.00 | 367.81 | |
| Total acres farmed | 131.20 | 579.25 | |
| Highly erodible acres farmed | 79.00 | 371.09 | |
| Total # of information sources | 2.95 | 3.14 | |
| Total communication channels | 2.69 | 3.49 |
Clear Creek and the Corn Belt
| Tenure and farmers characteristics | Full-owner | Part-owner and tenant |
|---|---|---|
| Age | ||
| Clear Creek | 63 | 57 |
| Illinois | 60 | 54 |
| Indiana | 57 | 53 |
| Iowa | 60 | 53 |
| Missouri | 60 | 54 |
| Ohio | 58 | 54 |
| Gender: %women | ||
| Clear Creek | 30 | 34 |
| Illinois | 13 | 3 |
| Indiana | 13 | 4 |
| Iowa | 12 | 3 |
| Missouri | 14 | 5 |
| Ohio | 15 | 4 |
| Total acres farmed | ||
| Clear Creek | 131 | 579 |
| Illinois | 111 | 711 |
| Indiana | 79 | 584 |
| Iowa | 132 | 616 |
| Missouri | 170 | 568 |
| Ohio | 80 | 405 |
Sources: (U.S. Department of Agriculture National Agricultural Statistical Service 2012; Nickerson et al. 2011; USDA NASS 2010). The data on crops grown as percentage of total land area are from 2009, except the information on grassland, pasture and range which is from 2007, since USDA does not collect data on it annually
Tillage & rotation percentages for owners & renters
| Practice | Renters ( | Owners ( |
|---|---|---|
| Planting rotation regime | ||
| Corn/soybean | 36 | 59 |
| Corn/corn/soybean | 64 | 41 |
| Tillage regime | ||
| Conservation tillage | 79 | 74 |
| Conventional tillage | 21 | 26 |
Correlations between information sources & channels used for conservation information and owners/renters
| Information source | Owners ( | Renters ( | Correlation |
|---|---|---|---|
| NRCS | .395 | .585 | −0.185* |
| Farm Service Agency | .512 | .585 | −0.071 |
| County Extension Service | .523 | .528 | −0.005 |
| Iowa State University | .291 | .283 | 0.008 |
| Agri-chem dealer | .291 | .359 | −0.071 |
| Neighbors & friends | .523 | .377 | 0.142 |
| Soil Conservation District Commissioner | .198 | .226 | −0.034 |
| Ag instructors | .023 | .038 | −0.042 |
| Non-profits | .070 | .038 | 0.067 |
| Field demonstrations (tours) | .22 | .47 | −0.26** |
| County and local meetings | .28 | .43 | −0.16 |
| Magazines | .58 | .60 | −0.02 |
| Printed materials (brochures) | .64 | .60 | 0.04 |
| Trade shows & fairs | .10 | .25 | −0.19* |
| Visual materials (slides, photos) | .06 | .25 | −0.27** |
| Internet, webcasts, podcasts | .17 | .28 | −0.13 |
| TV programs (DVDs, tapes) | .22 | .21 | 0.02 |
| Radio | .17 | .26 | −0.11 |
| On-farm consultation | .23 | .23 | 0.01 |
* Correlation is significant at the 0.05 level (2-tailed)
** Correlation is significant at the 0.01 level (2-tailed)