Abney, Alexandra Anne (2017-12). LANDOWNER PERCEPTIONS OF WOODY PLANT ENCROACHMENT AND PRESCRIBED FIRE LIABILITY. Master's Thesis. Thesis uri icon

abstract

  • Prescribed fire is an affordable and effective tool in managing woody plant encroachment, but landowners' liability perceptions contribute to their inconsistent application of fire. Personal liability concerns can be exacerbated or allayed by social and legal factors. This research focuses on the extent landowner perceptions regarding prescribed fire liability influence their willingness to participate in prescribed burns for woody plant management. Questionnaires mailed to 1918 landowners in 16 counties of Oklahoma and Texas evaluated several factors that might affect their willingness to burn. These include: attitudes concerning woody plants and fire; use of land management practices; knowledge about prescribed fire; Prescribed Burn Associations (PBAs) membership; and landowner characteristics. Membership in a PBA was positively correlated with landowner willingness to burn their own or a neighbor's property while a perception of general personal liability was negatively related with willingness to burn. Percentage of income earned from rural property, place of residence, state of residence, education level, perceived relative affordability of prescribed fire as a woody plant management tool, and burn bans were all factors that significantly influenced landowner willingness to burn depending on situational context, i.e. on their property v. another person's property. The results of this study contribute to our understanding of landowner decision-making with respect to social and legal concerns over prescribed fire and suggest a need for increased connection of landowners with local prescribed burn associations, communication between policy makers and landowners, and reduction of barriers to landowners who wish to apply prescribed fire.
  • Prescribed fire is an affordable and effective tool in managing woody plant
    encroachment, but landowners' liability perceptions contribute to their inconsistent
    application of fire. Personal liability concerns can be exacerbated or allayed by social
    and legal factors. This research focuses on the extent landowner perceptions regarding
    prescribed fire liability influence their willingness to participate in prescribed burns for
    woody plant management. Questionnaires mailed to 1918 landowners in 16 counties of
    Oklahoma and Texas evaluated several factors that might affect their willingness to
    burn. These include: attitudes concerning woody plants and fire; use of land
    management practices; knowledge about prescribed fire; Prescribed Burn Associations
    (PBAs) membership; and landowner characteristics. Membership in a PBA was
    positively correlated with landowner willingness to burn their own or a neighbor's
    property while a perception of general personal liability was negatively related with
    willingness to burn. Percentage of income earned from rural property, place of residence,
    state of residence, education level, perceived relative affordability of prescribed fire as a
    woody plant management tool, and burn bans were all factors that significantly
    influenced landowner willingness to burn depending on situational context, i.e. on their
    property v. another person's property. The results of this study contribute to our
    understanding of landowner decision-making with respect to social and legal concerns
    over prescribed fire and suggest a need for increased connection of landowners with
    local prescribed burn associations, communication between policy makers and
    landowners, and reduction of barriers to landowners who wish to apply prescribed fire.

publication date

  • December 2017