Stakeholder mental model analysis supports focused conservation policy and actions for Eurasian beaver (Castor fiber) reintroduction

Eurasian beaver, Castor fiber has been restored to England's natural fauna following a trial reintroduction located in the country's southwestern region. Beavers characteristically generate profound and frequently beneficial shifts to river dynamics, nutrient cycling, biodiversity, and human cultural experience, but can also be associated with unwanted human interactions, impacts and costs. Consequently, an important objective of the trial design was to ensure conservation leadership, monitoring and mitigation for problems such as burrowing, damming and flooding, and damage to valued trees. To understand how these developments are perceived and accepted, implicated key stakeholder mental models were elicited and explored, using fuzzy cognitive map techniques. Analysis showed broad alignment of ecological understanding between stakeholders. Social perspectives showed marked divergence, a focus of concern as social conflict can undermine otherwise ecologically viable conservation benefits. To investigate perceived effectiveness of trial conservation measures, stakeholder models with and without conservation actions were experimentally compared under dynamic analysis. Overall, the findings indicate that actions taken are sustaining beaver acceptance and limiting persecution. Of stakeholder groups examined, farming appeared most susceptible to model divergence, but also strongly protected by mitigation. This is important as reconciling mental model differences is considered a necessary element in building socio-ecological system resilience. These findings highlight mental model analysis as a valuable aid to assessment of social dimensions of conservation policies. Further, mental modelling could help to focus how farm payment reform in the U.K. and similar economies might be used to support leadership and mitigation designed to improve human-beaver ecosystem resilience.

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Main Authors: Blewett, Andrew, Jacobs, Maarten, Kok, Kasper, Jones, Natalie, Ogle, Sharron
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Castor fiber, Fuzzy cognitive map, Mental model, Reintroduction, Wildlife conservation,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/stakeholder-mental-model-analysis-supports-focused-conservation-p
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5880272024-12-04 Blewett, Andrew Jacobs, Maarten Kok, Kasper Jones, Natalie Ogle, Sharron Article/Letter to editor Journal for Nature Conservation 64 (2021) ISSN: 1617-1381 Stakeholder mental model analysis supports focused conservation policy and actions for Eurasian beaver (Castor fiber) reintroduction 2021 Eurasian beaver, Castor fiber has been restored to England's natural fauna following a trial reintroduction located in the country's southwestern region. Beavers characteristically generate profound and frequently beneficial shifts to river dynamics, nutrient cycling, biodiversity, and human cultural experience, but can also be associated with unwanted human interactions, impacts and costs. Consequently, an important objective of the trial design was to ensure conservation leadership, monitoring and mitigation for problems such as burrowing, damming and flooding, and damage to valued trees. To understand how these developments are perceived and accepted, implicated key stakeholder mental models were elicited and explored, using fuzzy cognitive map techniques. Analysis showed broad alignment of ecological understanding between stakeholders. Social perspectives showed marked divergence, a focus of concern as social conflict can undermine otherwise ecologically viable conservation benefits. To investigate perceived effectiveness of trial conservation measures, stakeholder models with and without conservation actions were experimentally compared under dynamic analysis. Overall, the findings indicate that actions taken are sustaining beaver acceptance and limiting persecution. Of stakeholder groups examined, farming appeared most susceptible to model divergence, but also strongly protected by mitigation. This is important as reconciling mental model differences is considered a necessary element in building socio-ecological system resilience. These findings highlight mental model analysis as a valuable aid to assessment of social dimensions of conservation policies. Further, mental modelling could help to focus how farm payment reform in the U.K. and similar economies might be used to support leadership and mitigation designed to improve human-beaver ecosystem resilience. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/stakeholder-mental-model-analysis-supports-focused-conservation-p 10.1016/j.jnc.2021.126064 https://edepot.wur.nl/555347 Castor fiber Fuzzy cognitive map Mental model Reintroduction Wildlife conservation https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Castor fiber
Fuzzy cognitive map
Mental model
Reintroduction
Wildlife conservation
Castor fiber
Fuzzy cognitive map
Mental model
Reintroduction
Wildlife conservation
spellingShingle Castor fiber
Fuzzy cognitive map
Mental model
Reintroduction
Wildlife conservation
Castor fiber
Fuzzy cognitive map
Mental model
Reintroduction
Wildlife conservation
Blewett, Andrew
Jacobs, Maarten
Kok, Kasper
Jones, Natalie
Ogle, Sharron
Stakeholder mental model analysis supports focused conservation policy and actions for Eurasian beaver (Castor fiber) reintroduction
description Eurasian beaver, Castor fiber has been restored to England's natural fauna following a trial reintroduction located in the country's southwestern region. Beavers characteristically generate profound and frequently beneficial shifts to river dynamics, nutrient cycling, biodiversity, and human cultural experience, but can also be associated with unwanted human interactions, impacts and costs. Consequently, an important objective of the trial design was to ensure conservation leadership, monitoring and mitigation for problems such as burrowing, damming and flooding, and damage to valued trees. To understand how these developments are perceived and accepted, implicated key stakeholder mental models were elicited and explored, using fuzzy cognitive map techniques. Analysis showed broad alignment of ecological understanding between stakeholders. Social perspectives showed marked divergence, a focus of concern as social conflict can undermine otherwise ecologically viable conservation benefits. To investigate perceived effectiveness of trial conservation measures, stakeholder models with and without conservation actions were experimentally compared under dynamic analysis. Overall, the findings indicate that actions taken are sustaining beaver acceptance and limiting persecution. Of stakeholder groups examined, farming appeared most susceptible to model divergence, but also strongly protected by mitigation. This is important as reconciling mental model differences is considered a necessary element in building socio-ecological system resilience. These findings highlight mental model analysis as a valuable aid to assessment of social dimensions of conservation policies. Further, mental modelling could help to focus how farm payment reform in the U.K. and similar economies might be used to support leadership and mitigation designed to improve human-beaver ecosystem resilience.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Castor fiber
Fuzzy cognitive map
Mental model
Reintroduction
Wildlife conservation
author Blewett, Andrew
Jacobs, Maarten
Kok, Kasper
Jones, Natalie
Ogle, Sharron
author_facet Blewett, Andrew
Jacobs, Maarten
Kok, Kasper
Jones, Natalie
Ogle, Sharron
author_sort Blewett, Andrew
title Stakeholder mental model analysis supports focused conservation policy and actions for Eurasian beaver (Castor fiber) reintroduction
title_short Stakeholder mental model analysis supports focused conservation policy and actions for Eurasian beaver (Castor fiber) reintroduction
title_full Stakeholder mental model analysis supports focused conservation policy and actions for Eurasian beaver (Castor fiber) reintroduction
title_fullStr Stakeholder mental model analysis supports focused conservation policy and actions for Eurasian beaver (Castor fiber) reintroduction
title_full_unstemmed Stakeholder mental model analysis supports focused conservation policy and actions for Eurasian beaver (Castor fiber) reintroduction
title_sort stakeholder mental model analysis supports focused conservation policy and actions for eurasian beaver (castor fiber) reintroduction
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/stakeholder-mental-model-analysis-supports-focused-conservation-p
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AT jacobsmaarten stakeholdermentalmodelanalysissupportsfocusedconservationpolicyandactionsforeurasianbeavercastorfiberreintroduction
AT kokkasper stakeholdermentalmodelanalysissupportsfocusedconservationpolicyandactionsforeurasianbeavercastorfiberreintroduction
AT jonesnatalie stakeholdermentalmodelanalysissupportsfocusedconservationpolicyandactionsforeurasianbeavercastorfiberreintroduction
AT oglesharron stakeholdermentalmodelanalysissupportsfocusedconservationpolicyandactionsforeurasianbeavercastorfiberreintroduction
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