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May 16 webinar final
1. American
Natural Resource
Wetlands
Enterprises: Diversifying Month
Income and Conservation Webinar
on Private Lands www.epa.gov/owow/awa
May 16, 2011
2. May is American Wetlands Month:
Learn! Explore! Take Action!
-Outreach and Education on the benefits of healthy
wetlands is important during American Wetland Month
and all year long
-Both Regulatory and Non-regulatory partnerships are
crucial for the protection of wetlands
- Private landowners and local decision makers need
community-based and tools and incentives to enhance
wetland protection
2
3. Justin Schneider
JSchneider@infarmbureau.org
Brian MacGowan
macgowan@purdue.edu
Adam T. Rohnke
arohnke@ext.msstate.edu
W. Daryl Jones
djones@cfr.msstate.edu
www.naturalresources.msstate.edu
3
4. W. Daryl Jones, Ph.D.
Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, &
Aquaculture
Mississippi State University
662/325-5769
djones@cfr.msstate.edu
www.naturalresources.msstate.edu
4
5. Outdoor Recreation in USA
Participants - 87.5
million
Expenditures – $122
billion (US) spent
Hunting - $23 billion
Fishing - $42 billion
Wildlife watching - $46
billion
5
6. Outdoor Recreation in Mississippi
Hunting
$1,203,742,401 –
economic impact
38,274 jobs
created
7. Outdoor Recreation in Mississippi
Fishing
$690,161,178 –
economic impact
12,176 jobs
created
7
8. Outdoor Recreation in Mississippi
Wildlife watching
$791,337,311 –
economic impact
20,985 jobs created
8
9. Outdoor Recreation in Mississippi
Total economic
impact
$2,685,240,890
71,435 jobs
created
9
10. Outdoor Enterprises in Mississippi
Hunting
$23,364,968 –
economic impact
360 jobs created
10
11. Outdoor Enterprises in Mississippi
Gun range
operations
$7,887,355 –
economic impact
139 jobs created
Paintball sports
$6,143,931
• 71 jobs created
11
12. Outdoor Enterprises in Mississippi
Angling
$1,195,135 – freshwater
• 18 jobs created
$4,022,752 – charter boat
• 60 jobs created
12
13. Outdoor Enterprises in Mississippi
Agritourism
$3,425,834 –
economic impact
42 jobs created
13
20. Landowner Workshop Series
Hosted on landowner
property
Involve community
leaders
Presentations from
professionals and
landowners
How to information
20
24. Workshop Results
Expected annual earnings
$25,208 per landowner
$26.53 per acre
$13 million – aggregate
cash flow
Improved 1.2 million
acres in conservation
Over 100,000 wetland
acres
24
25. Adam T. Rohnke
Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and
Aquaculture
Mississippi State University
601/857-2284
arohnke@ext.msstate.edu
www.naturalresources.msstate.edu
25
26. National Program Focus
Initial states inc.
Indiana
• 4 workshops
• Several presentations
to commodity groups
South Carolina
• 3 workshops
Minnesota Conducted workshops
• 1 workshop
Program Interest
26
27. Outdoor Recreation in Indiana
Hunting
272,000 hunters
$223 million spent
Fishing
768,000 anglers
$627 million spent
Wildlife Watching
2,000,000 participants
$933 million
27
28. Indiana – Preliminary Planning
Multiple conference calls
NRE staff visits
Presented to local
partners and host
landowners
Assisted in program
design
Produced marketing
materials
28
29. Indiana Workshops – 2009-2010
Wilkins Farm, Inc.
Montgomery County
Woodling’s Farm
Monroe County
Dagaz Acres
Ohio County
Dull’s Tree Farm
Boone County
29
31. Brian MacGowan
Department of Forestry and Natural
Resources
Purdue University
765/647-3538
macgowan@purdue.edu
http://web.ics.purdue.edu/~macgowan/
31
32. Indiana Partners
Local partners included:
Purdue Univ.
IN Farm Bureau
Nature Conservancy of IN
Local soil and water
conservation districts
Indiana Agricultural Law
Foundation, Inc.
32
34. Indiana – Woodling’s Farm
Topics
Real-life
example
Liability Morning Afternoon Field
issues Presentations Tours
Alt. energy
production
Sustainable
forestry
34
35. Indiana – Dagaz Acres, Inc.
Topics
Real-life
example
Liability Morning Afternoon Field
issues Presentations Tours
Outdoor
recreation
Watershed
protection
35
36. Indiana – Dull’s Tree Farm
Topics
Real-life
example
Liability Morning Afternoon Field
issues Presentations Tours
Christmas
Trees
Outdoor
recreation
36
37. Indiana Results
3.8 on 4.0 scale
95% of participants
met wildlife
management goals
94% of participants
met revenue goals
67% of participants
will change land
use practices
37
44. W. Daryl Jones, Ph.D.
Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, &
Aquaculture
Mississippi State University
662/325-5769
djones@cfr.msstate.edu
www.naturalresources.msstate.edu
44
50. National Benefits
Conservation of sensitive
lands
Sustainable economic
development
Landowner income and
stewardship
Outdoor recreation
50
51. Conclusions
Outreach provides needed
skills
Owners enhance income
Stakeholder collaboration
Sustainable development &
resource conservation in
rural communities
51
52. Remember
May is American Wetlands Month:
Learn! Explore! Take Action!
www.epa.gov/owow/awa
Audience Questions?
52
Notes de l'éditeur
71,435 jobs created in MS87.5 million participants$122 billion in expenditures
71,435 jobs created in MS87.5 million participants$122 billion in expenditures
71,435 jobs created in MS87.5 million participants$122 billion in expenditures
71,435 jobs created in MS87.5 million participants$122 billion in expenditures
748 jobs created in MS by outfitters87.5 million participants$122 billion in expenditures
748 jobs created in MS by outfitters87.5 million participants$122 billion in expenditures
748 jobs created in MS by outfitters87.5 million participants$122 billion in expenditures
748 jobs created in MS by outfitters87.5 million participants$122 billion in expenditures
748 jobs created in MS by outfitters87.5 million participants$122 billion in expenditures
748 jobs created in MS by outfitters87.5 million participants$122 billion in expenditures
Introduce sections of the presentation with Tullos, Rohnke, Kathy, and WadeClientele - Legislative briefings (7) starting in 2006
Introduce sections of the presentation with Tullos, Rohnke, Kathy, and WadeClientele - Legislative briefings (7) starting in 2006
Attendees from 10 states; events held in AL, AR, IN, LA, MI, MN, SC, TNRiver Cane Symposium with MBCI and enterprise development on tribal landsJoyce Bear (Historic Preservation Officer - HPO)Muscogee (Creek) Nation - OklahomaMBCI - MSChippewa Indians - MN
$17.16/acre in expected revenues collected from enterprises
$1.0 billion spent in total
$17.16/acre in expected revenues collected from enterprises
Fraction of the overall activities involved30-40% of contacts, site visits are wildlife and fisheries related in addition to Enterprises
NRE Program Website statistics: 23,940 visitors from 139 countries and 21,776 visits via 50 US states and territories. Additionally, the NRE Workshop Website, which advertises and facilitates online registration for events, received 1,909 visits from 50 US states in 2010. In summary, total clientele served equaled 47,625
Fraction of the overall activities involved30-40% of contacts, site visits are wildlife and fisheries related in addition to Enterprises