4.4 Article

Examining farmers' adoption of nutrient management best management practices: a social cognitive framework

Journal

AGRICULTURE AND HUMAN VALUES
Volume 39, Issue 2, Pages 535-553

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10460-021-10266-2

Keywords

Nutrient management; Social cognitive theory; Efficacy; Motivation; Structural factors

Funding

  1. Iowa Agriculture and Home Economics Experiment Station, Ames, Iowa - USDA-NIFA
  2. State of Iowa funds

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Efforts to understand motivations and barriers underlying farmers' conservation actions are crucial for improving outreach strategies and promoting the adoption of soil and water conservation practices. Factors such as self-efficacy, motivations, age, and crop acres play important roles in predicting farmers' adoption of in-field nutrient management Best Management Practices. This research provides valuable insights for policymakers, extension agencies, and researchers regarding the adoption of nutrient management practices.
The Iowa Nutrient Reduction Strategy (NRS) aims to reduce nutrient loads in waterways from nonpoint sources such as farm fields. Farmers' voluntary adoption of soil and water conservation practices is crucial for achieving NRS goals. Although the Iowa NRS has been active since 2013, farmer participation and net pollutant reductions have been insufficient. Therefore, continued efforts to understand the motivations and barriers that underlie farmers' conservation actions in a comprehensive and integrated manner are needed to improve outreach strategies, and research examining the relationships among factors such as farmers' self-efficacy, motivations, perceived economic pressure, and soil and water conservation practices adoption in row crop production systems is needed to inform that outreach. This research employed social cognitive theory and previous research around the conceptual category of motivations to inform the study of relationships between the dynamic precursors and later modifiers of farmers' adoption of in-field nutrient management Best Management Practices. Data are from the 2014-2016 Iowa Farm and Rural Life Poll. Self-efficacy, collective efficacy, stewardship motivation, crop insurance, perceived economic pressure, age, and crop acres were important predictors of adoption. This research provides innovative insights for policymaking, extension agencies, and other researchers concerning the adoption of nutrient management practices.

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