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Library Factors affecting farm operators' interest in incorporating riparian buffers and forest farming practices in northeast and southeast Missouri

Factors affecting farm operators' interest in incorporating riparian buffers and forest farming practices in northeast and southeast Missouri

Factors affecting farm operators' interest in incorporating riparian buffers and forest farming practices in northeast and southeast Missouri

Resource information

Date of publication
December 2009
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201301576003
Pages
61-71

Interest in the incorporation of riparian buffers and forest farming were modeled following agricultural conservation and agroforestry adoption studies. Attitudes, individual characteristics, economic diversity of landowners' household portfolio, and physical and ecological conditions were explanatory variables in Logit regression models of interest. Habitus and field, the values and institutions of farm operators, were included in the framework. Knowledge of the practice, perceived problems with the environment and attitude/habitus variables had a positive effect on the probability of being interested in riparian buffers. Knowledge of the practice was the most important factor in explaining interest in the case of forest farming, followed by attitudes about trees and concern for future generations, both habitus variables. Field variables like CRP payments representing familiarity with government programs that support conservation, had no significant effect on interest in riparian buffers. Older farmers were less interested in both practices, consistent with other findings. Existing economic diversification of the household portfolio had no effect on the probability of being interested in either practice.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Valdivia, Corinne
Poulos, Christine

Publisher(s)
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