4.7 Article

Monitoring and evaluating the social and psychological dimensions that contribute to privately protected area program effectiveness

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
Volume 229, Issue -, Pages 170-178

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2018.11.026

Keywords

Conservation covenants; Conservation easements; Conservation psychology; Land trusts; Management capacity; Private land conservation

Funding

  1. Nature Conservancy Australia (Thomas Foundation)
  2. Australian Land Conservation Alliance
  3. Nature Conservation Trust of NSW
  4. Trust for Nature (Victoria)
  5. Tasmanian Land Conservancy
  6. Nature Foundation SA
  7. Queensland Trust for Nature
  8. Tasmanian Department of Primary Industries, Parks, Water and Environment
  9. Sarah Bekessy of the Interdisciplinary Conservation Science Research Group at RMIT University
  10. Australian Research Council (ARC) Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions [CE11001000104]
  11. Sarah Bekessy's ARC Future Fellowship [FT130101225]

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Privately protected areas (PPAs) make important contributions towards global conservation goals. As with any protected area, PPAs must be monitored for effectiveness at protecting and managing biodiversity. However, the key drivers of maintaining and improving the effectiveness of PPAs are often social, particularly for conservation covenants and easements that are owned and managed by private landholders. In Australia, we surveyed 527 covenant landholders across three states (New South Wales, Tasmania, and Victoria), to provide a benchmark for monitoring and evaluation activities. We found that landholders are mainly motivated to participate in order to protect their land in perpetuity, but come to expect financial and technical assistance as a benefit of the program. While 71.1% (n = 344) reported achieving their land management goals, 44.7% (n = 242) of landholders struggle with covenant management because of age, and financial and time constraints. Covenant landholders are generally satisfied with the program (92%). A subset (8%) of landholders feels disaffected with their participation, relating to their perceived inability to personally manage the biodiversity on their land, and the lack of interaction they have with representatives of covenanting organizations. Where compliance monitoring and semi-annual technical assistance is limited, some landholders are concerned that the efficacy of the covenant is reduced. To increase effectiveness we suggest that PPA programs regularly monitor landholder satisfaction and management needs, schedule conservation actions based on landholder capacity, and utilize landholder networks to spread information and foster communities of stewardship. Additionally, given the older demographics of landholders, programs should engage in PPA successional planning.

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