Evaluating the effectiveness of fortified livestock enclosures as a human-carnivore conflict mitigation tool in Tanzania's Ruaha landscape

IF 2.8 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Ana Grau, Jonathan Salerno, Tom Hilton, Asanterabi Lowasa, Alayne Cotterill, Amy J. Dickman
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Abstract

Conflict with humans, particularly over livestock predation, poses a severe and continuing threat to the conservation of large carnivores, particularly in reserve-adjacent and unprotected areas. Such conflict also inflicts substantial costs on people living alongside large carnivores. Though conflict is complex, attacks upon livestock are one of the factors that drive immediate hostility toward carnivores, inflict economic damage upon livestock-keepers, and can lead to retaliatory and preventative carnivore killing. Many conflict mitigation and livestock protection approaches exist, but it is crucial to examine their effectiveness. In this study, we evaluated the effectiveness of fortified livestock enclosures in reducing predation of livestock in an area surrounding Ruaha National Park in southern Tanzania. These fortified enclosures are built with chain-link fences and are aimed to replace the traditional enclosures built with acacia thorn branches. We implemented a before-after-control-impact (BACI) design to test the short-term impacts of the fortified enclosure intervention. We then conducted a cost–benefit analysis (CBA) based on costs of construction of fortified enclosures and benefits accruing as prevented livestock depredation. Finally, we tested the hypothesis that fortified enclosures would diminish in effectiveness over time as carnivores become habituated, the fortification deteriorates due to lack of maintenance, and/or predation risk would increase. For the long-term analysis, we used monthly data from 758 livestock-keeping households from 2010 to 2016. Across both short- and long-term analyses, fortified enclosures were effective at reducing the odds of experiencing predation of livestock by carnivores by 94% and 60%, respectively. Based on mean predation rates (c. 0.10 livestock month) and observed reductions, the benefit/cost ratios over 5 years of construction of a fortified enclosure with metal or wooden poles are 3.36 and 7.89, respectively, when subsidized. Our study contributes actionable evidence on the impact of an intervention to inform conservation strategies supporting human–carnivore coexistence.

Abstract Image

评估强化牲畜圈舍作为坦桑尼亚鲁阿哈地貌人与食肉动物冲突缓解工具的有效性
与人类的冲突,特别是在捕食牲畜方面的冲突,对大型食肉动物的保护构成了严重和持续的威胁,特别是在保护区附近和未受保护的地区。这种冲突也给与大型食肉动物生活在一起的人们带来了巨大的代价。虽然冲突是复杂的,但对牲畜的攻击是导致人们立即对食肉动物产生敌意的因素之一,给牲畜饲养者造成经济损失,并可能导致报复性和预防性的食肉动物杀戮。目前存在许多缓解冲突和保护牲畜的办法,但至关重要的是审查其有效性。在这项研究中,我们评估了在坦桑尼亚南部Ruaha国家公园周围地区强化牲畜围栏减少牲畜捕食的有效性。这些加固的围栏由链式围栏建造,旨在取代用金合欢刺树枝建造的传统围栏。我们实施了控制影响前-控制影响后(BACI)设计,以测试强化围护措施的短期影响。然后,我们进行了一项成本效益分析(CBA),该分析基于建造强化围栏的成本和防止牲畜掠夺所产生的收益。最后,我们验证了以下假设:随着食肉动物的习惯,强化围栏的有效性会随着时间的推移而降低,由于缺乏维护,强化围栏会恶化,并且/或被捕食的风险会增加。对于长期分析,我们使用了2010年至2016年758户养畜户的月度数据。在短期和长期分析中,强化围栏有效地将牲畜被食肉动物捕食的几率分别降低了94%和60%。根据平均捕食率(0.0.10个牲畜月)和观察到的减少,在补贴的情况下,用金属或木杆建造强化围栏的5年收益/成本比分别为3.36和7.89。我们的研究为干预措施的影响提供了可操作的证据,为支持人类-食肉动物共存的保护策略提供了信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Conservation Science and Practice
Conservation Science and Practice BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION-
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
6.50%
发文量
240
审稿时长
10 weeks
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