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We assessed relationships between the extent to which farmers reported exposure to relevant information and their attitudes
towards, knowledge about, and degree of adoption of riparian management strategies. We also examined associations between
knowledge of, or receipt of, financial assistance for riparian fencing/planting and intentions for and extent of adoption
of this strategy. A mail survey of 718 pastoral farmers in Otago and Southland in New Zealand [294 surveys returned (41%)]
yielded 279 usable questionnaires. Indices were developed to reflect range and frequency of information use and range of practices
adopted. Attitudes were measured using Likert-type responses to 11 statements, and knowledge as a score on a ten-question
true/false test. Positive relationships between information and the three main response variables (attitude, knowledge, and
adoption) were weak but significant and systematic. These associations remained significant when important demographic and
farm characteristics were taken into account. Informed farmers were more likely to report intentions to carry out riparian
fencing or planting within the next year. Farmers who were aware that funding was available were also more likely to state
this intention, independent of information level. The reported extent to which waterways had been fenced to exclude stock
was related to receipt of funding, but not to information level. Financial factors were the most influential barrier preventing
adoption of permanent fencing. Our research shows a positive correlation between the receipt of information and funding and
the adoption of specific riparian management measures. 相似文献
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Conventional methods for management of data‐rich fisheries maintain sustainable populations by assuring that lifetime reproduction is adequate for individuals to replace themselves and accounting for density‐dependent recruitment. Fishing is not allowed to reduce relative lifetime reproduction, the fraction of current egg production relative to unfished egg production (FLEP), below a sustainable level. Because most shark fisheries are data poor, other representations of persistence status have been used, including linear demographic models, which incorporate life‐history characteristics in age‐structured models with no density dependence. We tested how well measures of sustainability from 3 linear demographic methods (rebound potential, stochastic growth rate, and potential population increase) reflect actual population persistence by comparing values of these measures with FLEP for 26 shark species. We also calculated the value of fishing mortality (F) that would allow all 26 species to maintain an accepted precautionary threshold for sharks of FLEP = 60%, expressing F as a fraction of natural mortality (M). Values of stochastic growth rate and potential population growth did not covary in rank order with FLEP (p = 0.057 and p = 0.077, respectively) and neither was significantly correlated with FLEP. Ordinal ranking of rebound potential positively covaried with FLEP (p = 0.00013), but the relative rankings of some species were substantially out of order. Adopting a sustainable limit of F = 0.16M would maintain all 26 species above the precautionary minimum value of FLEP (60%). We concluded that shark‐fishery and conservation policies should rely on calculation of replacement (i.e., FLEP), and that sharks should be fished at a precautionary level that would protect all stocks (i.e., F< 0.16M). Comparación entre Modelos Demográficos Lineales y la Fracción de Producción de Huevos a lo Largo de la Vida para Estudiar la Sustentabilidad en Tiburones Resumen 相似文献
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