Children's attitudes towards animals are similar across suburban, exurban, and rural areas

被引:21
|
作者
Schuttler, Stephanie G. [1 ]
Stevenson, Kathryn [2 ]
Kays, Roland [1 ,3 ]
Dunn, Robert R. [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] North Carolina Museum Nat Sci, Raleigh, NC 27601 USA
[2] North Carolina State Univ, Dept Pk Recreat & Tourism Management, Raleigh, NC USA
[3] North Carolina State Univ, Dept Forestry & Environm Resources, Raleigh, NC USA
[4] North Carolina State Univ, Dept Appl Ecol, Raleigh, NC USA
[5] Univ Copenhagen, Nat Hist Museum Denmark, Ctr Macroecol Evolut & Climate, Copenhagen, Denmark
来源
PEERJ | 2019年 / 7卷
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Children; Attitudes; Biodiversity; Animals; Urbanization; Native; CONSERVATION; RECREATION; EXPERIENCE; PATTERNS; SOCIETY; SCIENCE; SCARY;
D O I
10.7717/peerj.7328
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The decline in the number of hours Americans spend outdoors, exacerbated by urbanization, has affected people's familiarity with local wildlife. This is concerning to conservationists, as people tend to care about and invest in what they know. Children represent the future supporters of conservation, such that their knowledge about and feelings toward wildlife have the potential to influence conservation for many years to come. Yet, little research has been conducted on children's attitudes toward wildlife, particularly across zones of urbanization. We surveyed 2,759 4-8th grade children across 22 suburban, exurban, and rural schools in North Carolina to determine their attitudes toward local, domestic, and exotic animals. We predicted that children who live in rural or exurban areas, where they may have more direct access to more wildlife species, would list more local animals as "liked" and fewer as "scary" compared to children in suburban areas. However, children, regardless of where they lived, provided mostly non-native mammals for open-ended responses, and were more likely to list local animals as scary than as liked. We found urbanization to have little effect on the number of local animals children listed, and the rankings of "liked" animals were correlated across zones of urbanization. Promising for conservation was that half of the top "liked" animals included species or taxonomic groups containing threatened or endangered species. Despite different levels of urbanization, children had either an unfamiliarity with and/or low preference for local animals, suggesting that a disconnect between children and local biodiversity is already well-established, even in more rural areas where many wildlife species can be found.
引用
收藏
页数:18
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