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Climate change beliefs, concerns, and attitudes toward adaptation and mitigation among farmers in the Midwestern United States
Drought Mitigation Center: Faculty Publications
  • J. Gordon Arbuckle, Iowa State University
  • Linda Stalker Prokopy, Purdue University
  • Tonya Haigh, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
  • Jon Hobbs, Iowa State University
  • Tricia Knoot, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
  • Cody Knutson, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
  • Adam Loy, Iowa State University
  • Amber Saylor Mase, Purdue University
  • Jean McGuire, Iowa State University
  • Lois Wright Morton, Iowa State University
  • John Tyndall, Iowa State University
  • Melissa Widhalm, Purdue University
Date of this Version
1-1-2013
Citation

Published in Climatic Change 117 (2013), pp. 943–950; doi: 10.1007/s10584-013-0707-6

Comments

Copyright © 2013 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht. Used by permission.

Abstract

A February 2012 survey of almost 5,000 farmers across a region of the U.S. that produces more than half of the nation’s corn and soybean revealed that 66% of farmers believed climate change is occurring (8% mostly anthropogenic, 33% equally human and natural, 25% mostly natural), while 31% were uncertain and 3.5% did not believe that climate change is occurring. Results of initial analyses indicate that farmers’ beliefs about climate change and its causes vary considerably, and the relationships between those beliefs, concern about the potential impacts of climate change, and attitudes toward adaptive and mitigative action differ in systematic ways. Farmers who believed that climate change is occurring and attributable to human activity were significantly more likely to express concern about impacts and support adaptive and mitigative action. On the other hand, farmers who attributed climate change to natural causes, were uncertain about whether it is occurring, or did not believe that it is occurring were less concerned, less supportive of adaptation, and much less likely to support government and individual mitigative action. Results suggest that outreach with farmers should account for these covariances in belief, concerns, and attitudes toward adaptation and mitigation.

Includes Supplementary materials.

Citation Information
J. Gordon Arbuckle, Linda Stalker Prokopy, Tonya Haigh, Jon Hobbs, et al.. "Climate change beliefs, concerns, and attitudes toward adaptation and mitigation among farmers in the Midwestern United States" (2013)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/john_tyndall/6/