Understanding the role of psychological distance in preventing the spread of kauri dieback
Hugh A. N. Benson, Andrea Grant, Nicole Lindsay, Donald Hine, Jianpeng Fan, Jianpeng Fan, Jianpeng Fan, Jianpeng Fan

TL;DR
This study explores how psychological distance affects people's compliance with measures to prevent the spread of kauri dieback in New Zealand.
Contribution
The study introduces psychological distance as a novel predictor of compliance with kauri dieback mitigation behaviors.
Findings
Higher pro-environmental worldviews and closer physical proximity reduce psychological distance.
Psychological distance significantly improves self-reported compliance with boot cleaning and track use guidelines.
Psychological distance partially mediates the effects of worldview, trust, and physical distance on compliance behaviors.
Abstract
Kauri dieback is a soil-borne pathogen of the family Phytophthora which is lethal to kauri trees. Despite its risks, residents of New Zealand often do not follow imposed mitigation strategies. In this study we explored the potential impact of three factors on psychological distance to kauri dieback: pro-environmental worldviews, trust in government and physical distance from kauri forests. We also investigated the extent to which previously validated psychological distance measures predicted kauri forest visitors’ compliance with boot-cleaning and trail-usage guidelines (behaviours linked to the spread of kauri dieback). A survey assessing beliefs and behaviours related to kauri dieback was completed by a sample of 451 New Zealand residents who had visited a kauri forest in the past four years. Two path analyses were conducted to determine whether the effects of environmental worldview…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrban Agriculture and Sustainability · Plant and animal studies · Powdery Mildew Fungal Diseases
