南部非洲保护景观中的野生动物走廊:人为保护动脉沿线多物种流动的政治生态学。

IF 0.9 3区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY Anthropology Southern Africa Pub Date : 2024-08-08 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1080/23323256.2024.2327467
Michael Bollig
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引用次数: 0

摘要

生物多样性的减少是全球公众讨论的一个重要话题。这些讨论引发了增加保护区和保护连接保护区的走廊的巨大努力。本文讨论的野生动物走廊主要被认为有利于大象和其他一些大型食草动物(如斑马和水牛)的移动。野生动物走廊不仅对物种的连通性至关重要,而且也是纳米比亚东北部保护区蓬勃发展的生态旅游不可或缺的一部分。共存基础设施旨在促进经济发展和增加当地收入。保护区--在纳米比亚以社区为基础的保护组织--公告走廊,并向生态旅游者、旅游业的潜在投资者和商业猎人推销丰富的野生动物。不过,人类与野生动物的共存具有挑战性。人类与野生动物之间的互动经常会造成破坏,而保护主义的环境基础设施建设往往与农民扩大农田以生产商用作物和获得牧场以饲养牛群的目标背道而驰。这也与政府支持的其他基础设施建设相抵触,这些基础设施包括柏油马路、输水管道和井眼。本文分析了纳米比亚赞比西河地区西部有争议的野生动物走廊,该走廊是更大的保护主义项目的一部分。
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Wildlife corridors in a Southern African conservation landscape: the political ecology of multispecies mobilities along the arteries of anthropogenic conservation.

The decline of biodiversity is a key topic in public discussions around the globe. These debates have triggered massive efforts to increase protected areas and to safeguard the corridors connecting them. The wildlife corridors dealt with in this article are mainly thought to facilitate the mobility of elephants and some other large herbivores (for example, zebra and buffalo). Wildlife corridors are not only essential for species connectivity but also an integral part of the booming ecotourism in north-eastern Namibia's conservation landscapes. Coexistence infrastructure is meant to contribute to economic development and local incomes. Conservancies - community-based conservation organisations in the Namibian context - gazette corridors and market wildlife abundance to ecotourists, potential investors in tourism and commercial hunters. The coexistence of humans and wildlife is challenging, though. Human-wildlife interactions frequently result in damage, and often conservationist environmental infrastructuring runs against the aims of farmers to expand their fields for commercial crop production and to gain pastures for growing cattle herds. It also runs against other governmentally endorsed infrastructuring that brings tarred roads, water pipelines and boreholes. This article analyses contested wildlife corridors as part of a larger conservationist project in the western parts of Namibia's Zambezi Region.

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