| Literature DB >> 29451923 |
Amy R Lewis1, Richard P Young2,3, James M Gibbons1, Julia P G Jones1.
Abstract
There is a major gap in funding required for conservation, especially in low income countries. Given the significant contribution of taxpayers in industrialized countries to funding conservation overseas, and donations from membership organisation, understanding the preferences of ordinary people in a high income country for different attributes of conservation projects is valuable for future marketing of conservation. We conducted a discrete choice experiment with visitors to a UK zoo, while simultaneously conducting a revealed preference study through a real donation campaign on the same sample. Respondents showed the highest willingness to pay for projects that have local community involvement in management (95% confidence interval £9.82 to £15.83), and for improvement in threatened species populations (£2.97 - £13.87). Both of these were significantly larger than the willingness to pay for projects involving provision of alternative livelihoods, or improving the condition of conservation sites. Results of the simultaneous donation campaign showed that respondents were very willing to donate the suggested £1 or above donation (88% made a donation, n = 1798); there was no effect of which of the two campaigns they were exposed to (threatened species management or community involvement in management). The small number of people who did not make a donation had a higher stated willingness to pay within the choice experiment, which may suggest hypothetical bias. Conservationists increasingly argue that conservation should include local communities in management (for both pragmatic and moral reasons). It is heartening that potential conservation donors seem to agree.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29451923 PMCID: PMC5815612 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0192935
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Conservation management approaches Madagascar, their attributes and levels used in the choice experiment and the validation method used in revealed preference study.
| The extent to which the conservation project’s focus is improving or maintaining populations of threatened species. | BAU: Population declines | Visitors were asked to make a £1 donation for a conservation project in Madagascar (focused on threatened species). | |
| Low: Maintain current populations | |||
| High: Population increases | |||
| The extent to which local people are trained and empowered to protect their local environment. | BAU: In no communities | Visitors were asked to make a £1 donation for a conservation project in Madagascar (involving local communities in management). | |
| Low: In few communities | |||
| High: In many communities | |||
| The extent to which the conservation project improves or maintains the condition of conservation sites. | BAU: No conservation activity | None | |
| Low: Maintain the field sites | |||
| High: Improve the field sites | |||
| The extent to which the conservation project invests in supporting alternative livelihoods for local communities. | BAU: No investment | None | |
| Low: Limited investment | |||
| High: Significant investment. | |||
| A one-off payment to support the project campaign. | £0, £1, £5, £20, £50 | Real donation of £1 or more to either Marketing campaign |
Note: Each attribute has three levels of conservation interventions including a business as usual scenario (BAU). Payment levels were determined in the pilot study.
Fig 1Sample choice task, where respondents were asked to select their preferred option.
Fig 2Descriptive statistics of the respondents within the choice experiment survey.
Fig 3Mean willingness to pay (and 95% confidence intervals) for attributes and interacted socio-economic variables of respondents for conservation management scenarios in Madagascar.
Summary results of donators and refusers the two marketing campaigns run at Jersey zoo over a four week period of alternating campaign types during July and August 2016.
| 797 (89) | 778 (86) | 1575 (88) | |
| 98 (11) | 125 (14) | 223 (12) | |
| 895 | 903 | 1798 |
Data Source: Durrell Marketing department July- August 2016. Chi squared = 3.02 (P = 0.074)
Fig 4Mean willingness to pay (and 95% confidence intervals) for attributes within the choice experiment for those individuals that gave a real voluntary donation during either marketing campaign prior to participating in the choice experiment.
Fig 5The difference between respondents that donated or refused during the real campaigns for both their willingness to pay and the payment coefficient within the choice experiment.
(A) Willingness to pay for respondents that refused or donated in the real campaigns for the corresponding attributes in the choice experiment. Donations and refusals are combined across the marketing campaigns as there was no significant effect of exposure on preference. The violin plots show median, upper and lower quartiles and the centred density. (B) Individual coefficients for the payment attribute within the choice experiment for respondents that either refused or donated within the choice experiment. Donations and refusals are combined across the marketing campaigns as there was no significant effect of exposure.