Surveying Louisiana waterfowl hunters: Open web and random mail surveys produce similar responses to attitudinal questions

ABSTRACT We surveyed random and convenience samples of Louisiana, USA, waterfowl hunters after the 2009–2010 season, and asked identical questions about waterfowl‐hunting effort, success, satisfaction, regulatory alternatives, and demographics. We received 727 usable responses to our random mail sur...

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Main Authors: Lucien P. Laborde Jr., Frank C. Rohwer, Michael D. Kaller, Larry A. Reynolds
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2014-12-01
Series:Wildlife Society Bulletin
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/wsb.492
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author Lucien P. Laborde Jr.
Frank C. Rohwer
Michael D. Kaller
Larry A. Reynolds
author_facet Lucien P. Laborde Jr.
Frank C. Rohwer
Michael D. Kaller
Larry A. Reynolds
author_sort Lucien P. Laborde Jr.
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT We surveyed random and convenience samples of Louisiana, USA, waterfowl hunters after the 2009–2010 season, and asked identical questions about waterfowl‐hunting effort, success, satisfaction, regulatory alternatives, and demographics. We received 727 usable responses to our random mail survey, and 949 usable responses to an on‐line web survey that was accessible to the general public. Compared with the random mail survey, respondents to the web survey hunted more frequently, harvested more waterfowl, and placed greater importance on waterfowl hunting. However, we noted similarities in attitudes toward regulatory alternatives across survey methods. Binary logistic regression of 13 variables measuring effort, success, satisfaction, and demographics accurately predicted the survey method of 75.5% of respondents. Similar analysis of 10 variables measuring attitudes toward regulatory alternatives categorized only 63.1% of the respondents into their correct survey mode, and failed to meet conservative standards for predictive accuracy. Polar reclassification of attitudinal responses into bichotomous categories led to identical managerial conclusions, irrespective of survey method. Based on our results, we believe responses from the random mail survey more accurately represent the demographics, effort, and success of Louisiana waterfowl hunters; however, the attitudes of respondents did not differ between random mail and convenience web samples, especially in regard to regulatory alternatives. The ease and low cost of web surveys are important advantages over traditional mail surveys. We suggest survey methodology be carefully linked to survey objectives, and that open web surveys may be used to supplement random surveys in investigations of stakeholder attitudes to inform development of natural resource policy. © 2014 The Wildlife Society.
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spelling doaj-art-6b3db3ce7d1c4a06957b05f1e84c642a2024-12-16T12:55:42ZengWileyWildlife Society Bulletin2328-55402014-12-0138482182610.1002/wsb.492Surveying Louisiana waterfowl hunters: Open web and random mail surveys produce similar responses to attitudinal questionsLucien P. Laborde Jr.0Frank C. Rohwer1Michael D. Kaller2Larry A. Reynolds3School of Renewable Natural ResourcesLouisiana State University Agricultural CenterBaton RougeLA70803USADelta Waterfowl FoundationP.O. Box 3128BismarckND58502USASchool of Renewable Natural ResourcesLouisiana State University Agricultural CenterBaton RougeLA70803USALouisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries2000 Quail DriveBaton RougeLA70808USAABSTRACT We surveyed random and convenience samples of Louisiana, USA, waterfowl hunters after the 2009–2010 season, and asked identical questions about waterfowl‐hunting effort, success, satisfaction, regulatory alternatives, and demographics. We received 727 usable responses to our random mail survey, and 949 usable responses to an on‐line web survey that was accessible to the general public. Compared with the random mail survey, respondents to the web survey hunted more frequently, harvested more waterfowl, and placed greater importance on waterfowl hunting. However, we noted similarities in attitudes toward regulatory alternatives across survey methods. Binary logistic regression of 13 variables measuring effort, success, satisfaction, and demographics accurately predicted the survey method of 75.5% of respondents. Similar analysis of 10 variables measuring attitudes toward regulatory alternatives categorized only 63.1% of the respondents into their correct survey mode, and failed to meet conservative standards for predictive accuracy. Polar reclassification of attitudinal responses into bichotomous categories led to identical managerial conclusions, irrespective of survey method. Based on our results, we believe responses from the random mail survey more accurately represent the demographics, effort, and success of Louisiana waterfowl hunters; however, the attitudes of respondents did not differ between random mail and convenience web samples, especially in regard to regulatory alternatives. The ease and low cost of web surveys are important advantages over traditional mail surveys. We suggest survey methodology be carefully linked to survey objectives, and that open web surveys may be used to supplement random surveys in investigations of stakeholder attitudes to inform development of natural resource policy. © 2014 The Wildlife Society.https://doi.org/10.1002/wsb.492convenience samplehunter attitudesLouisiana waterfowl huntersopen web surveypolar reclassificationprobabilistic sample
spellingShingle Lucien P. Laborde Jr.
Frank C. Rohwer
Michael D. Kaller
Larry A. Reynolds
Surveying Louisiana waterfowl hunters: Open web and random mail surveys produce similar responses to attitudinal questions
Wildlife Society Bulletin
convenience sample
hunter attitudes
Louisiana waterfowl hunters
open web survey
polar reclassification
probabilistic sample
title Surveying Louisiana waterfowl hunters: Open web and random mail surveys produce similar responses to attitudinal questions
title_full Surveying Louisiana waterfowl hunters: Open web and random mail surveys produce similar responses to attitudinal questions
title_fullStr Surveying Louisiana waterfowl hunters: Open web and random mail surveys produce similar responses to attitudinal questions
title_full_unstemmed Surveying Louisiana waterfowl hunters: Open web and random mail surveys produce similar responses to attitudinal questions
title_short Surveying Louisiana waterfowl hunters: Open web and random mail surveys produce similar responses to attitudinal questions
title_sort surveying louisiana waterfowl hunters open web and random mail surveys produce similar responses to attitudinal questions
topic convenience sample
hunter attitudes
Louisiana waterfowl hunters
open web survey
polar reclassification
probabilistic sample
url https://doi.org/10.1002/wsb.492
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