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Climate change beliefs and forest management in eastern Oregon: implications for individual adaptive capacity

The management decisions of private landowners affect forest structure and composition, and may impact the resilience of forested regions. In this case study we assessed barriers to both intentional and incidental climate-adaptive forest management among nonindustrial private forest owners in easter...

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Published in:Ecology and society 2018-12, Vol.23 (4), p.1, Article art1
Main Authors: Boag, Angela E., Hartter, Joel, Hamilton, Lawrence C., Christoffersen, Nils D., Stevens, Forrest R., Palace, Michael W., Ducey, Mark J.
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container_issue 4
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container_title Ecology and society
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creator Boag, Angela E.
Hartter, Joel
Hamilton, Lawrence C.
Christoffersen, Nils D.
Stevens, Forrest R.
Palace, Michael W.
Ducey, Mark J.
description The management decisions of private landowners affect forest structure and composition, and may impact the resilience of forested regions. In this case study we assessed barriers to both intentional and incidental climate-adaptive forest management among nonindustrial private forest owners in eastern Oregon, USA. In this context, incidental adaptations result from synergies between climate-adaptive forest management and actions motivated by goals such as wildfire mitigation, which landowners may prioritize regardless of concerns about climate change. Through semistructured interviews we used qualitative analyses to identify barriers to adaptation, including subjective (cognitive and experiential) and structural barriers (social, political, and economic) by comparing individual cases. Overall, we found that intentional climate change adaptation had low salience among participants, though a large majority of forest owners were active managers motivated by other goals, contributing to widespread incidental adaptation. We found that nonindustrial private forest owners who engaged in or considered intentional climate adaptation actions generally believed that anthropogenic climate change is occurring. Many respondents perceived local environmental change, notably reduced snowpack, but this was not associated with adaptive actions or intentions. The few participants who considered or implemented intentional climate adaptation actions generally had written forest management plans containing both forest inventories and specific management goals. Improving access to resources for forest management planning may enhance fire- and climate-smart forest management by facilitating scenario visioning and formalizing intentions. Although climate change beliefs were subjective barriers to intentional climate adaptation, many of the same structural barriers limited intentional and incidental adaptation. Place-based education, reliable funding mechanisms, and cooperative approaches among landowners may enhance adaptive capacity and promote the resilience of these nonindustrial private forestlands.
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subjects Adaptation
adaptive capacity
Anthropogenic factors
Barriers
Case studies
Climate adaptation
Climate change
climate change adaptation
Cognition
Cognitive ability
Constraints
Cooperation
drought
Environmental changes
Environmental impact
Fire prevention
Forest management
Forestry
Forests
Human influences
Management planning
Mitigation
Planning
private land
Private property
Qualitative analysis
Qualitative research
Resilience
Resource management
Respondents
Snowpack
Wildfires
title Climate change beliefs and forest management in eastern Oregon: implications for individual adaptive capacity
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