Abstract
Sustainable game management relies on satisfied hunters. Satisfaction determinants are seldom uniform across all hunters and may therefore be difficult to accommodate. Latent class analysis (LCA) is a probabilistic model-based approach to categorizing hunter typologies (by, e.g., their attitudes and preferences). We applied LCA to large-scale survey data relating to grouse hunting regulations in Norway (3,293 respondents). We identified three typologies with regard to importance of bag size (“The Experience Seeker” 43%, “The Bag Oriented” 32% and “The Northern Traditionalist” 25%) and crowding tolerance (“The Semi-tolerant Mainstream” 85%, “The Laissez Faire” 11%, and “The Passionate Crowd-avoiding” 4%). We could not find a single set of typologies that conformed to both aspects, which suggests that studies of this kind are more likely to be successful if target-specific. We conclude that knowledge of typologies is valuable for tailoring local hunting regulations, provided their actual distribution is identified at the appropriate scale.
Acknowledgments
This research was supported by the Norwegian Research Council, program Nature-based industry, grant 176321.
Notes
1. Ptarmigan spp. are not the only grouse species in Norway, but the national hunting registry only specify ptarmigan. The remaining grouse species are grouped with other small game.