The Elephant Queen: Can a nature documentary help to increase tolerance towards elephants?

IF 4.2 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION People and Nature Pub Date : 2024-03-04 DOI:10.1002/pan3.10599
H. F. Williams, K. L. Leneuiyia, B. Mwalavu, G. Serem, V. Sempeyo, F. Pope, L. E. King, D. Veríssimo
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Abstract

Conflict between humans and elephants is one of the more complex examples of human‐wildlife conflict, a key challenge for wildlife conservation. While interventions exist to separate humans from elephants, few exist aimed at bringing the two species closer together. This study assesses if a natural history film, The Elephant Queen (TEQ), makes communities living around elephants more tolerant of conflict with elephants. Questionnaires and interviews were conducted before and after seeing the film screened on a mobile cinema in Southern Kenya. A double robust ordinal regression analysis using 357 matching specifications to measure the effect size of viewing TEQ on the six criteria identified as being drivers of tolerance of a wild animal by the Hazard Acceptance model. This study found that students aged between 16 and 18 gained knowledge (mean effect size = 0.27) and affection (mean effect size = 0.17) towards elephants and felt the benefits of elephants more keenly (mean effect size = 0.26) following viewing TEQ. Community members aged between 16–80 also gained knowledge (mean effect size = 0.21) and saw the benefits of elephants (mean effect size = 0.15) but felt the costs of living with elephants more profoundly after viewing TEQ (mean effect size = −0.11). After 90 days a follow‐up survey also showed a significant increase in community “affection” towards elephants (mean effect size = 0.11), however the costs, benefits and knowledge gained had been reduced to a statistically insignificant level compared to baseline. Our results suggest that natural history films can serve as a valuable tool in inspiring young minds. When shown to an adult audience, changes were more nuanced and some of the changes were short lived (<3 months). Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
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大象女王一部自然纪录片能否帮助人们增进对大象的宽容?
人类与大象之间的冲突是人类与野生动物冲突中较为复杂的例子之一,也是野生动物保护面临的主要挑战。本研究评估了自然历史影片《大象女王》(The Elephant Queen,TEQ)是否能使生活在大象周围的社区更加宽容地对待与大象的冲突。研究人员在肯尼亚南部的一家流动影院观看影片前后进行了问卷调查和访谈。该研究发现,16 至 18 岁的学生在观看《TEQ》后对大象有了更多的了解(平均效应大小 = 0.27)和喜爱(平均效应大小 = 0.17),并更强烈地感受到了大象的益处(平均效应大小 = 0.26)。年龄在 16-80 岁之间的社区成员也在观看 TEQ 后增长了知识(平均效应大小 = 0.21),看到了大象的益处(平均效应大小 = 0.15),但更深刻地感受到与大象共同生活的代价(平均效应大小 = -0.11)。90 天后的后续调查也显示,社区对大象的 "好感 "显著增加(平均效应大小 = 0.11),但与基线相比,成本、益处和获得的知识在统计意义上降低到了不显著的水平。我们的研究结果表明,自然历史影片可以作为启发青少年思维的重要工具。当向成年观众放映时,变化更加细微,而且有些变化持续时间较短(<3 个月)。
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来源期刊
People and Nature
People and Nature Multiple-
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
9.80%
发文量
103
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍:
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