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A Changing Climate in the Maple Syrup Industry: Variation in Canadian and U.S.A. Producers’ Climate Risk Perceptions and Willingness to Adapt Across Scales of Production

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Abstract

Maple syrup production (“maple sugaring”) is an important cultural and economic activity in eastern Canada and the northeastern United States (U.S.A.). Climate change is a concern for maple producers because maple sugaring is dependent upon climate for both sap sugar content as well as for the specific patterns of freezing and thawing in springtime needed for sap flow. Meanwhile, the maple industry itself is in transition: historically, maple sugaring has been a small-scale seasonal activity, but today large producers tap thousands of trees, contributing to a widening gap in production volumes and production practices between small- and large-scale producers. Drawing on original survey data from 354 maple producers in Canada and the United States we ask how attitudes towards climate change risks and adaptation strategies differ between smaller-scale and larger-scale producers. Findings suggest that small-scale, medium-scale and large-scale maple producers have different perceptions of climate change risks, report different impacts of climate change on maple sap yields, and have different levels of willingness to use adaptation strategies ranging from tapping more trees to adopting new production technologies. In multivariate ordered logistic regression models controlling for producer age, education, and political affiliation, we consistently find the strongest correlates of attitudes towards climate change risks—and the willingness or ability of producers to adopt different adaptation strategies—are country of residence (with preferred adaptation strategies varying across Canada versus the U.S.A.) and producer scale (with larger producers adopting more adaptation strategies). We conclude that more detailed and up-to-date information on the different types of maple operations—including effects of climate change on maple sugaring and available adaptation strategies across geographies and across scales of production—is needed to help maple producers, maple producer associations, and policymakers understand how the maple industry is evolving and how best to prepare for the future.

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Acknowledgements

Many thanks to Antoine Plouffe-Leboeuf for initiating the online survey, as well as to Diane M. Kuehn, Florence Becot, and the University of Vermont Center for Rural Studies for their valuable insights on the present and future of maple sugaring. This work was supported by the UVM Agricultural Experiment Station funded by USDA Hatch #VT-HO2605.

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Correspondence to Travis W. Reynolds.

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Caughron, A., Legault, S., Haut, C. et al. A Changing Climate in the Maple Syrup Industry: Variation in Canadian and U.S.A. Producers’ Climate Risk Perceptions and Willingness to Adapt Across Scales of Production. Small-scale Forestry 20, 73–95 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11842-020-09457-2

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