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| Auteurs principaux: | , , , , , |
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| Format: | Artículo científico |
| Langue: | en |
| Publié: |
Scientific reports
2025
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| Sujets: | |
| Accès en ligne: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40102617/ |
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| _version_ | 1868266228862156802 |
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| author | Carlson, Rachel R Klitzke, Joanna Daily, Gretchen C Crowder, Larry B Reguero, Borja G Asner, Gregory P |
| author_facet | Carlson, Rachel R Klitzke, Joanna Daily, Gretchen C Crowder, Larry B Reguero, Borja G Asner, Gregory P Carlson, Rachel R Klitzke, Joanna Daily, Gretchen C Crowder, Larry B Reguero, Borja G Asner, Gregory P |
| collection | PubMed - marine biology |
| contents | Coastal business perception of coral value and payment for coral restoration. Carlson, Rachel R Klitzke, Joanna Daily, Gretchen C Crowder, Larry B Reguero, Borja G Asner, Gregory P Anthozoa Animals Coral Reefs Conservation of Natural Resources Hawaii Environmental Restoration and Remediation Commerce Humans Ecosystem Coral reefs provide important economic benefits to coastal businesses, supporting recreation and tourism and protecting property from storms. Yet, these benefits are at risk worldwide as corals decline rapidly, and investment in restoration is lacking. With their direct dependence on coral health, coastal businesses may represent an important sector for funding coral restoration; however, it is unclear whether businesses perceive coral reef services as valuable or themselves as reef stewards. We measured business perceptions of coral health and value in Hawai'i and identified traits correlated with business decisions to participate in coral restoration at three payment thresholds. We found that businesses see limited economic value in coral reefs. In areas where corals provide substantial ecosystem services (flood protection, tourism revenue), businesses did not consistently rate coral value as high. Nonetheless, businesses showed strong willingness to pay for coral restoration, which was linked to pro-nature motives, reputation, and Native Hawaiian ownership. Results highlight key strategies for engaging private entities in coral restoration. |
| format | Artículo científico |
| id | pubmed_40102617 |
| institution | PubMed |
| language | en |
| publishDate | 2025 |
| publisher | Scientific reports |
| record_format | pubmed |
| spellingShingle | Coastal business perception of coral value and payment for coral restoration. Carlson, Rachel R Klitzke, Joanna Daily, Gretchen C Crowder, Larry B Reguero, Borja G Asner, Gregory P Anthozoa Animals Coral Reefs Conservation of Natural Resources Hawaii Environmental Restoration and Remediation Commerce Humans Ecosystem Coastal business perception of coral value and payment for coral restoration. Carlson, Rachel R Klitzke, Joanna Daily, Gretchen C Crowder, Larry B Reguero, Borja G Asner, Gregory P Anthozoa Animals Coral Reefs Conservation of Natural Resources Hawaii Environmental Restoration and Remediation Commerce Humans Ecosystem Coral reefs provide important economic benefits to coastal businesses, supporting recreation and tourism and protecting property from storms. Yet, these benefits are at risk worldwide as corals decline rapidly, and investment in restoration is lacking. With their direct dependence on coral health, coastal businesses may represent an important sector for funding coral restoration; however, it is unclear whether businesses perceive coral reef services as valuable or themselves as reef stewards. We measured business perceptions of coral health and value in Hawai'i and identified traits correlated with business decisions to participate in coral restoration at three payment thresholds. We found that businesses see limited economic value in coral reefs. In areas where corals provide substantial ecosystem services (flood protection, tourism revenue), businesses did not consistently rate coral value as high. Nonetheless, businesses showed strong willingness to pay for coral restoration, which was linked to pro-nature motives, reputation, and Native Hawaiian ownership. Results highlight key strategies for engaging private entities in coral restoration. |
| title | Coastal business perception of coral value and payment for coral restoration. |
| topic | Anthozoa Animals Coral Reefs Conservation of Natural Resources Hawaii Environmental Restoration and Remediation Commerce Humans Ecosystem |
| url | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40102617/ |