A Model to Estimate Willingness to Pay for Harvest Permits for Wild Edible Mushrooms: Application to Andalusian Forests
Public demand for harvesting wild edible mushrooms has risen in recent decades and currently affects many forested areas around the world. The idea of introducing permits for users has been conceived as a tool for ecosystem management. The problem is that policy-makers lack the necessary means to help guide them when establishing prices for such harvesting permits. Valuing the recreational benefits which mushroom harvesters derive from harvesting wild edible mushrooms may provide certain guidelines as to how much people would be willing to pay and may also justify future payments levied on harvesters. The aim of the present article is to estimate a model for determining citizens' willingness to pay for a harvesting permit in a forest in Andalusia (Spain) using contingent valuation methods. Results show that mean willingness to pay is 22.61 Euros (USD28.18) per harvester and season. This amount depends on several socioeconomic factors and preferences related to harvesters' experiences. ; The authors wish to thank the Andalusian Regional Government and the Agency for Water and Environment in Andalusia for their financial support, and would also like to express their gratitude to the staff members María Isabel Martín and Luis Guzmán for helping in the field work in a group of agroforestry farms within the framework of the RECAMAN project (Contract NET165602). We acknowledge support by the CSIC Open Access Publication Initiative through its Unit of Information Resources for Research (URICI).