Wildlife corridor degradation and human-wildlife conflict: A case study from Tanzania

IF 1.1 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q4 ECOLOGY African Journal of Ecology Pub Date : 2024-05-04 DOI:10.1111/aje.13264
Manase Elisa, Tim Caro, Lisa Yon, Ian C. W. Hardy, Simon Roberts, Elias Symeonakis
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Abstract

In many African countries, anthropogenic pressure and poor governance have led to the degradation of wildlife corridors, which are important for the long-term viability of wildlife populations. Yet the nature of such degradation is poorly understood, hindering our ability to reverse these trends. We studied a deteriorating wildlife corridor between Katavi and Mahale National Parks in western Tanzania. Using satellite imagery, we found that the corridor still contains large areas of natural vegetation, diverse terrain and numerous water sources. There has nonetheless been increasing encroachment of the corridor by people between 1990 and 2017, exemplified by a 9% reduction in the area covered by miombo woodlands and a fourfold increase in the area covered by settlements and agricultural land. We used three additional methods to assess deterioration over the last three decades: elephants' movement routes, peoples' perception of animal populations and incidents of human–wildlife conflicts. Elephants were primarily found only in the parts of the corridor adjacent to the two national parks. Tracking of elephant spoor revealed a much-diminished corridor use, suggesting that seemingly ‘healthy’ habitat within a wildlife corridor will not necessarily predict the presence of elephants or perhaps of other species. Other factors particularly the increasing presence of humans in the area are possibly more important for predicting elephant use of a corridor. Interviews with local residents and conservation experts suggested that, although use by some animal species has declined, many ungulates were still seen in the corridor and neighbouring villages, some of which were associated with human–wildlife conflict. All villages around the corridor were affected by the human–wildlife conflict; this comprised crop damage, livestock injury or killing and attacks on humans. We conclude that corridors could be restored if people were restricted from settling, but this would require governments to enact policies that balance the conservation of Natural Capital with survival of human populations; the latter may involve internal migration in response to growing population pressures.

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野生动物走廊退化与人类-野生动物冲突:坦桑尼亚案例研究
在许多非洲国家,人为压力和管理不善导致野生动物走廊退化,而野生动物走廊对野生动物种群的长期生存至关重要。然而,人们对这种退化的性质知之甚少,这阻碍了我们扭转这种趋势的能力。我们研究了坦桑尼亚西部卡塔维国家公园和马哈雷国家公园之间日益恶化的野生动物走廊。通过卫星图像,我们发现该走廊仍有大面积的自然植被、多样的地形和众多的水源。然而,1990 年至 2017 年间,该走廊被人类侵占的面积不断增加,例如,米松林地覆盖的面积减少了 9%,而定居点和农田覆盖的面积增加了四倍。我们还使用了另外三种方法来评估过去三十年的恶化情况:大象的活动路线、人们对动物数量的看法以及人类与野生动物的冲突事件。大象主要只出现在走廊与两个国家公园相邻的部分。对大象粪便的追踪显示,大象对走廊的使用大大减少,这表明野生动物走廊内看似 "健康 "的栖息地并不一定能预测大象或其他物种的存在。其他因素,尤其是人类在该地区的日益增多,可能对预测大象对走廊的使用更为重要。与当地居民和保护专家的访谈表明,虽然一些动物物种对走廊的使用有所减少,但在走廊和附近的村庄仍然可以看到许多有蹄类动物,其中一些与人类与野生动物的冲突有关。走廊周围的所有村庄都受到了人类与野生动物冲突的影响,包括农作物受损、牲畜受伤或死亡以及人类受到攻击。我们的结论是,如果限制人类定居,走廊是可以恢复的,但这需要政府制定政策,在保护自然资本和人类生存之间取得平衡;后者可能涉及到为应对日益增长的人口压力而进行的内部迁移。
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来源期刊
African Journal of Ecology
African Journal of Ecology 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
10.00%
发文量
134
审稿时长
18-36 weeks
期刊介绍: African Journal of Ecology (formerly East African Wildlife Journal) publishes original scientific research into the ecology and conservation of the animals and plants of Africa. It has a wide circulation both within and outside Africa and is the foremost research journal on the ecology of the continent. In addition to original articles, the Journal publishes comprehensive reviews on topical subjects and brief communications of preliminary results.
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