A global analysis of coral reef conservation preferences

authored by
Luke McKinnon Brander, Peter Robinson, Pieter van Beukering
Abstract

Coral reefs and many associated fish populations may cease to exist by the end of the century without additional long-term strategic conservation effort. This paper examines the willingness of the general public to pay for global coral and reef fish conservation in 12 countries of varying income and tropical reef proximity. We analyse preferences for several conservation measures, as well as the impact of individual-specific characteristics and preferences on conservation demand. Moreover, the role of scarcity in shaping this demand is explored. Overall, our findings suggest that preferences of the general public are not well aligned with coral reef conservation measures that are likely to be effective over time. Individuals are more willing to act to save reefs when they are in serious decline than when they are in moderate decline. They also prefer hands-on restoration measures in certain countries, which empirically have been shown to have varying rates of success, over expanding marine protected areas and strengthening legislation. We further find that conservation demand is highest in sampled countries where income is low. On the basis of these results, we draw key implications for policymaking decisions.

External Organisation(s)
Vrije Universiteit
Type
Article
Journal
Nature Sustainability
Volume
6
Pages
1600-1606
No. of pages
7
Publication date
12.2023
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG 14 - Life Below Water
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41893-023-01213-6 (Access: Closed)