TY - JOUR
T1 - Valuation of coral reefs in Japan
T2 - Willingness to pay for conservation and the effect of information
AU - Imamura, Kohei
AU - Takano, Kohei Takenaka
AU - Kumagai, Naoki H.
AU - Yoshida, Yumi
AU - Yamano, Hiroya
AU - Fujii, Masahiko
AU - Nakashizuka, Tohru
AU - Managi, Shunsuke
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank Shintaro Takao for his support in the study design; the Biological Institute on Kuroshio and Yoshihisa Fujita, Naoko Namizaki, Takashi Nakamura, and Yoshikatsu Nakano of Sango 15 Project for providing the photographs used in the explanation of coral reefs in the questionnaire survey; Kohei Iwai for editing the video materials; and Koichi Kuriyama for his support with the statistical analysis. This work was a part of the project “Precise Impact Assessments on Climate Change” of the Program for Risk Information on Climate Change (SOUSEI Program, JPMXD0712103606) supported by the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT) and was partly supported by the Environment Research and Technology Development Fund (JPMEERF16S11520 and JPMEERF20192007) of the Ministry of the Environment and the Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency of Japan. S.M, T.N, H.Y, M.F, N.H.K, Y.Y, and K.T.T conceived the study. Y.Y, K.T.T, and S.M designed the questionnaire survey including the DCE. The levels of SPECIES, AREA, and KYUSHU in the DCE were set by N.H.K and H.Y. K.I conducted the statistical analyses and estimated the WTPs. K.I and K.T.T prepared the manuscript, and all authors revised it critically.
Funding Information:
This work was a part of the project “Precise Impact Assessments on Climate Change” of the Program for Risk Information on Climate Change (SOUSEI Program, JPMXD0712103606) supported by the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology ( MEXT ) and was partly supported by the Environment Research and Technology Development Fund ( JPMEERF16S11520 and JPMEERF20192007 ) of the Ministry of the Environment and the Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency of Japan .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Author(s)
PY - 2020/12
Y1 - 2020/12
N2 - In recent decades, despite their value, coral reefs have been endangered and are swiftly declining because of land overuse, rising sea temperatures, and increasing ocean acidification. This study assesses the willingness to pay (WTP) for coral reef conservation in Japan. We conducted an online discrete choice experiment with 10,573 respondents. A latent class logit model framework was used, and three respondent classes were recognized. The first, consisting of about 60% of respondents, had the highest income level and a willingness to pay 326,036–414,391 JPY (100 JPY ≓ 1 USD) over a lifetime. Individuals in the second class, comprising approximately 30% of the respondents, were willing to pay 9792–12,262 JPY. The third class, consisting of approximately 10% of the respondents, comprised individuals not willing to pay any amount. We also evaluated the relative preferences of respondents for different conservation scenarios. The most preferred conservation target was total coral reef area, followed by scenic beauty, and species richness. We further estimate the effect of the types and amount of information on the WTP. Concise or detailed information with text and static images about coral reefs increased WTP by 11.7–19.1%. Providing video information, however, decreased the WTP by 4.9–7.0%.
AB - In recent decades, despite their value, coral reefs have been endangered and are swiftly declining because of land overuse, rising sea temperatures, and increasing ocean acidification. This study assesses the willingness to pay (WTP) for coral reef conservation in Japan. We conducted an online discrete choice experiment with 10,573 respondents. A latent class logit model framework was used, and three respondent classes were recognized. The first, consisting of about 60% of respondents, had the highest income level and a willingness to pay 326,036–414,391 JPY (100 JPY ≓ 1 USD) over a lifetime. Individuals in the second class, comprising approximately 30% of the respondents, were willing to pay 9792–12,262 JPY. The third class, consisting of approximately 10% of the respondents, comprised individuals not willing to pay any amount. We also evaluated the relative preferences of respondents for different conservation scenarios. The most preferred conservation target was total coral reef area, followed by scenic beauty, and species richness. We further estimate the effect of the types and amount of information on the WTP. Concise or detailed information with text and static images about coral reefs increased WTP by 11.7–19.1%. Providing video information, however, decreased the WTP by 4.9–7.0%.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.ecoser.2020.101166
DO - 10.1016/j.ecoser.2020.101166
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85090592591
SN - 2212-0416
VL - 46
JO - Ecosystem Services
JF - Ecosystem Services
M1 - 101166
ER -