Evaluating a large-scale online behaviour change intervention aimed at wildlife product consumers in Singapore.

Interventions to shift the behaviour of consumers using unsustainable wildlife products are key to threatened species conservation. Whether these interventions are effective is largely unknown due to a dearth of detailed evaluations. We previously conducted a country-level online behaviour change in...

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Main Authors: Hunter Doughty, E J Milner-Gulland, Janice Ser Huay Lee, Kathryn Oliver, L Roman Carrasco, Diogo Veríssimo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248144
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spelling doaj-cfa0e6cab5fc44fbbb54c024496c61432021-04-08T04:31:05ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01163e024814410.1371/journal.pone.0248144Evaluating a large-scale online behaviour change intervention aimed at wildlife product consumers in Singapore.Hunter DoughtyE J Milner-GullandJanice Ser Huay LeeKathryn OliverL Roman CarrascoDiogo VeríssimoInterventions to shift the behaviour of consumers using unsustainable wildlife products are key to threatened species conservation. Whether these interventions are effective is largely unknown due to a dearth of detailed evaluations. We previously conducted a country-level online behaviour change intervention targeting consumers of the Critically Endangered saiga antelope (Saiga tatarica) horn in Singapore. To evaluate intervention impact, we carried out in-person consumer surveys with >2,000 individuals pre- and post-intervention (2017 and 2019), and 93 in-person post-intervention surveys with traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) shopkeepers (2019). The proportion of self-reported high-usage saiga horn consumers in the target audience (Chinese Singaporean women aged 35-59) did not change significantly from pre- to post-intervention (24.4% versus 22.6%). However, post-intervention the target audience was significantly more likely than the non-target audience to accurately recall the intervention message and to report a decrease in saiga horn usage (4% versus 1% reported a behaviour change). Within the target audience, high-usage consumers were significantly more likely than lower-usage consumers to recall the message and report a behaviour change. Across respondents who reported a decrease in saiga horn usage, they cited the intervention message as a specific reason for their behaviour change significantly more than other reasons. Additionally, across all respondents, the belief that saiga is a common species in the wild decreased significantly from pre- to post-intervention. TCM shopkeepers, however, cited factors such as price and availability as the strongest influences on saiga horn sales. In sum, the intervention did significantly influence some consumers but the reduction of high-usage consumer frequency was not significant at the population level. We explore reasons for these findings, including competing consumer influences, characteristics of the intervention, and evaluation timing. This work suggests our intervention approach has potential, and exemplifies a multi-pronged in-person evaluation of an online wildlife trade consumer intervention.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248144
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hunter Doughty
E J Milner-Gulland
Janice Ser Huay Lee
Kathryn Oliver
L Roman Carrasco
Diogo Veríssimo
spellingShingle Hunter Doughty
E J Milner-Gulland
Janice Ser Huay Lee
Kathryn Oliver
L Roman Carrasco
Diogo Veríssimo
Evaluating a large-scale online behaviour change intervention aimed at wildlife product consumers in Singapore.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Hunter Doughty
E J Milner-Gulland
Janice Ser Huay Lee
Kathryn Oliver
L Roman Carrasco
Diogo Veríssimo
author_sort Hunter Doughty
title Evaluating a large-scale online behaviour change intervention aimed at wildlife product consumers in Singapore.
title_short Evaluating a large-scale online behaviour change intervention aimed at wildlife product consumers in Singapore.
title_full Evaluating a large-scale online behaviour change intervention aimed at wildlife product consumers in Singapore.
title_fullStr Evaluating a large-scale online behaviour change intervention aimed at wildlife product consumers in Singapore.
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating a large-scale online behaviour change intervention aimed at wildlife product consumers in Singapore.
title_sort evaluating a large-scale online behaviour change intervention aimed at wildlife product consumers in singapore.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Interventions to shift the behaviour of consumers using unsustainable wildlife products are key to threatened species conservation. Whether these interventions are effective is largely unknown due to a dearth of detailed evaluations. We previously conducted a country-level online behaviour change intervention targeting consumers of the Critically Endangered saiga antelope (Saiga tatarica) horn in Singapore. To evaluate intervention impact, we carried out in-person consumer surveys with >2,000 individuals pre- and post-intervention (2017 and 2019), and 93 in-person post-intervention surveys with traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) shopkeepers (2019). The proportion of self-reported high-usage saiga horn consumers in the target audience (Chinese Singaporean women aged 35-59) did not change significantly from pre- to post-intervention (24.4% versus 22.6%). However, post-intervention the target audience was significantly more likely than the non-target audience to accurately recall the intervention message and to report a decrease in saiga horn usage (4% versus 1% reported a behaviour change). Within the target audience, high-usage consumers were significantly more likely than lower-usage consumers to recall the message and report a behaviour change. Across respondents who reported a decrease in saiga horn usage, they cited the intervention message as a specific reason for their behaviour change significantly more than other reasons. Additionally, across all respondents, the belief that saiga is a common species in the wild decreased significantly from pre- to post-intervention. TCM shopkeepers, however, cited factors such as price and availability as the strongest influences on saiga horn sales. In sum, the intervention did significantly influence some consumers but the reduction of high-usage consumer frequency was not significant at the population level. We explore reasons for these findings, including competing consumer influences, characteristics of the intervention, and evaluation timing. This work suggests our intervention approach has potential, and exemplifies a multi-pronged in-person evaluation of an online wildlife trade consumer intervention.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0248144
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