Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lewis-Brown, Emily, Beatty, Hope, Davis, Katrina, Rabearisoa, Ando, Ramiaramanana, Jeannot, Ewers, Robert M, Mills, Morena
Formato: Artículo científico
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40536900/
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
_version_ 1868266188995297281
author Lewis-Brown, Emily
Beatty, Hope
Davis, Katrina
Rabearisoa, Ando
Ramiaramanana, Jeannot
Ewers, Robert M
Mills, Morena
author_facet Lewis-Brown, Emily
Beatty, Hope
Davis, Katrina
Rabearisoa, Ando
Ramiaramanana, Jeannot
Ewers, Robert M
Mills, Morena
Lewis-Brown, Emily
Beatty, Hope
Davis, Katrina
Rabearisoa, Ando
Ramiaramanana, Jeannot
Ewers, Robert M
Mills, Morena
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Improvements for better scaling of locally managed marine areas. Lewis-Brown, Emily Beatty, Hope Davis, Katrina Rabearisoa, Ando Ramiaramanana, Jeannot Ewers, Robert M Mills, Morena Conservation of Natural Resources Madagascar Fisheries Consumer Behavior Ecosystem To protect and restore ecosystems at the speed and scale required to meet current environmental challenges, a greater understanding of how conservation initiatives spread from existing to new adopters is required. According to the diffusion of innovation theory, positive adopter-to-peer communication is a powerful driver of innovation spread, whereas negative communications hinder innovation spread. Aware of this, businesses regularly survey customers and respond accordingly to maximize company growth. Therefore, we used 2 consumer satisfaction research measures commonly used by businesses, importance-performance analysis (IPA), which measures performance on metrics that are most important to customers, and net promoter score (NPS), which measures likely spread through positive referrals, to study satisfaction among adopters of locally managed marine areas (LMMAs) in northeastern Madagascar. Our results identified 4 attributes of LMMAs that adopters viewed as important but rated as worsening over time (funding and livestock provided by a nongovernmental organization, conflict in the village, and connections with others). Adopters considered control over resources and fisheries restrictions important and high performing. Villagers rated their quality of life since adopting LMMAs positively on average, but NPS returned a negative result overall and a strongly negative score for nonleaders. Our findings can be used to improve the design and management of LMMAs, inform pre- and postproject impact assessments to minimize negative impacts from conservation initiatives, and increase the spread of conservation initiatives. More broadly, this study presents a novel outlook for increasing the adoption of conservation initiatives by framing adopters of conservation initiatives as akin to customers whose perceptions of conservation initiatives matter inherently and because of their power to influence the spread of conservation initiatives.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_40536900
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2025
publisher Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Improvements for better scaling of locally managed marine areas.
Lewis-Brown, Emily
Beatty, Hope
Davis, Katrina
Rabearisoa, Ando
Ramiaramanana, Jeannot
Ewers, Robert M
Mills, Morena
Conservation of Natural Resources
Madagascar
Fisheries
Consumer Behavior
Ecosystem
Improvements for better scaling of locally managed marine areas. Lewis-Brown, Emily Beatty, Hope Davis, Katrina Rabearisoa, Ando Ramiaramanana, Jeannot Ewers, Robert M Mills, Morena Conservation of Natural Resources Madagascar Fisheries Consumer Behavior Ecosystem To protect and restore ecosystems at the speed and scale required to meet current environmental challenges, a greater understanding of how conservation initiatives spread from existing to new adopters is required. According to the diffusion of innovation theory, positive adopter-to-peer communication is a powerful driver of innovation spread, whereas negative communications hinder innovation spread. Aware of this, businesses regularly survey customers and respond accordingly to maximize company growth. Therefore, we used 2 consumer satisfaction research measures commonly used by businesses, importance-performance analysis (IPA), which measures performance on metrics that are most important to customers, and net promoter score (NPS), which measures likely spread through positive referrals, to study satisfaction among adopters of locally managed marine areas (LMMAs) in northeastern Madagascar. Our results identified 4 attributes of LMMAs that adopters viewed as important but rated as worsening over time (funding and livestock provided by a nongovernmental organization, conflict in the village, and connections with others). Adopters considered control over resources and fisheries restrictions important and high performing. Villagers rated their quality of life since adopting LMMAs positively on average, but NPS returned a negative result overall and a strongly negative score for nonleaders. Our findings can be used to improve the design and management of LMMAs, inform pre- and postproject impact assessments to minimize negative impacts from conservation initiatives, and increase the spread of conservation initiatives. More broadly, this study presents a novel outlook for increasing the adoption of conservation initiatives by framing adopters of conservation initiatives as akin to customers whose perceptions of conservation initiatives matter inherently and because of their power to influence the spread of conservation initiatives.
title Improvements for better scaling of locally managed marine areas.
topic Conservation of Natural Resources
Madagascar
Fisheries
Consumer Behavior
Ecosystem
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40536900/