Rural livelihoods, community-based conservation, and human-wildlife conflict: Scope for synergies?

被引:17
作者
Meyer, Maximilian [1 ,2 ]
Boerner, Jan [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Bonn, Inst Food & Resource Econ, Bonn, Germany
[2] Agroscope, Managerial Econ Agr, Ettenhausen, Switzerland
[3] Univ Bonn, Ctr Dev Res, Bonn, Germany
关键词
Human-wildlife conflict; Community-based conservation; CBNRM; Livelihoods; Food security; Southern Africa; HUMAN-ELEPHANT CONFLICT; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; IMPACTS; CONSERVANCIES; ADAPTATION; ATTITUDES; BENEFITS; AREAS;
D O I
10.1016/j.biocon.2022.109666
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Halting biodiversity loss is a major contemporary challenge. Nature protection can help conserve biodiversity, but increasing wildlife numbers inside protected areas and shrinking habitats intensify interactions between humans and wildlife, potentially causing human-wildlife conflict (HWC). Contemporary narratives of HWC highlight detrimental effects on households' socioeconomic outcomes. Despite a wealth of literature on HWC, many studies remain descriptive and little inferential evidence has been provided. Here we identify the determinants and effects of reported HWC on household outcomes using spatial predictors and an original farm-household dataset collected in Namibia's share of the Kavango-Zambezi Transfrontier Conservation Area. In addition to dependence on agriculture, we find that community-based conservation, the share of a community's area set aside for conservation, and habitat connectivity are key drivers of HWC. Contrary to contemporary narratives of HWC, we find that reported conflicts did not have strong negative effects on household income and livelihood diversity. Conversely, community-based wildlife conservation increases income and livelihood diversity among participating households. It is, however, also associated with food insecurity concerns. Such concerns may be driven by comparatively higher restrictions related to land use planning and zoning that constrain productive land uses, such as agriculture. Our findings suggest that community-based conservation can create development synergies for households in favorable environments, despite increasing HWC risks. However, potential trade-offs including non-material costs warrant further research.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [11] The interplay of drought, human-wildlife conflict and food security: Insights from rural Zimbabwe
    Kairiza, Terrence
    Pallegedara, Asankha
    Chigusiwa, Lloyd
    AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMICS, 2025, 69 (01) : 232 - 250
  • [12] Bibliometric analysis of human-wildlife conflict: From conflict to coexistence
    Su, Kaiwen
    Zhang, Han
    Lin, Lin
    Hou, Yilei
    Wen, Yali
    ECOLOGICAL INFORMATICS, 2022, 68
  • [13] Rearticulating the myth of human-wildlife conflict
    Peterson, M. Nils
    Birckhead, Jessie L.
    Leong, Kirsten
    Peterson, Markus J.
    Peterson, Tarla Rai
    CONSERVATION LETTERS, 2010, 3 (02): : 74 - 82
  • [14] Moral dimensions of human-wildlife conflict
    Lute, Michelle L.
    Navarrete, Carlos David
    Nelson, Michael Paul
    Gore, Meredith L.
    CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 2016, 30 (06) : 1200 - 1211
  • [15] Human-wildlife conflict and community perceptions towards wildlife conservation in and around a biodiverse National Park, northern Ethiopia
    Kidane, Esayas Embaye
    Kiros, Seyoum
    Berhe, Abadi
    Girma, Zerihun
    GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION, 2024, 54
  • [16] Wild Seve: A Novel Conservation Intervention to Monitor and Address Human-Wildlife Conflict
    Karanth, Krithi K.
    Vanamamalai, Anubhav
    FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2020, 8
  • [17] Human-Wildlife Conflict and Coexistence
    Nyhus, Philip J.
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF ENVIRONMENT AND RESOURCES, VOL 41, 2016, 41 : 143 - 171
  • [18] Tilting at wildlife: reconsidering human-wildlife conflict
    Redpath, Stephen Mark
    Bhatia, Saloni
    Young, Juliette
    ORYX, 2015, 49 (02) : 222 - 225
  • [19] Human-wildlife conflict at high altitude: A case from Gaurishankar conservation area, Nepal
    Pathak, Abhinaya
    Lamichhane, Saneer
    Dhakal, Maheshwar
    Karki, Ajay
    Dhakal, Bed Kumar
    Chetri, Madhu
    Mintz, Jeffrey
    Pun, Prakash
    Neupane, Pramila
    Dahal, Tulasi Prasad
    Rayamajhi, Trishna
    Paudel, Prashamsa
    Thapa, Ashim
    Regmi, Pramod Raj
    Thami, Shankar
    Thapa, Ganesh
    Khanal, Suraj
    Lama, Supriya
    Karki, Jenisha
    Khanal, Sujan
    Ferdin, Arockia E. J.
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2024, 14 (07):
  • [20] Human-Wildlife Conflict in a 'successful' Community Conservation Programme: Economic and territorial impacts on Namibia's conservancies
    Gargallo, Eduard
    JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS, 2021, 193