马达加斯加Lac Alaotra湿地综合体中家庭经济、人类健康和野生动物狩猎之间的相互作用评估

C. Borgerson, M. A. Vonona, Tojojady Vonona, Evelin Jean Gasta Anjaranirina, Richard E. Lewis, Fidy B. Ralainasolo, C. Golden
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引用次数: 12

摘要

在马达加斯加,野生动物保护与人类粮食安全和营养密切相关,因为许多人依赖野生食物维持生计。Lac Alaotra湿地综合体是一个生态区,对马达加斯加人民未来的粮食安全和当地野生动物的保护都是不可或缺的。该地区是马达加斯加最大的水稻产区,为世界上粮食安全最差的国家之一的居民提供了数千吨大米和鱼类。该湿地综合体还为许多濒危物种提供了栖息地,包括仅在Lac Alaotra湿地综合体中发现的两种极度濒危哺乳动物。环境管理者必须了解人们如何影响当地环境,以及环境如何反过来影响这些人、他们的生计以及他们未来使用自然资源的动机。如果不充分了解当地人及其自然环境的复杂互动,就不可能防止、缓解或适应这一复杂社会生态系统未来不必要的变化。我们使用了对1953名居民的健康评估和对Lac Alaotra湿地综合体内19个社区485户家庭成员的半结构访谈,来调查人类与环境的相互作用(包括当前的自然资源使用和狩猎,以及这些行为如何影响当地经济和人类福祉)。我们的团队发现,尽管整个地区的野生动物消费率非常低,但2013年,485个受访家庭的成员食用了975种哺乳动物,其中包括至少16只温和的阿罗特拉狐猴。2013年,13%的家庭食用了野生动物,只有不到1%的被猎杀的野生动物被出售。就业率和年收入均高于马达加斯加其他地区,食品成本相对较低。然而,98%的家庭经历了粮食不安全,应对机制(如减少份量)似乎对幼儿和家庭中的非工作成员产生了不成比例的影响。一半的家庭没有得到每人每天最低建议的千卡热量。我们发现儿童营养不良率很高,这与全国农村统计数据一致。虽然野生动物的消费似乎对阿劳特拉湿地综合体的社区没有显著的经济或健康益处,但高度的粮食不安全大大增加了家庭食用森林和沼泽地哺乳动物的数量。为了改善儿童营养和野生动物保护,我们建议采取有针对性的干预措施,改善粮食安全。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
An evaluation of the interactions among household economies, human health, and wildlife hunting in the Lac Alaotra wetland complex of Madagascar
In Madagascar, wildlife conservation and human food security and nutrition are deeply interconnected as many people rely on wild foods for sustenance. The Lac Alaotra wetland complex is an ecoregion which is indispensable to both the future food security of Madagascar’s people and the conservation of its endemic wildlife. The region is Madagascar’s largest rice production area, providing thousands of tons of rice and fish to the residents of one of the world’s least food secure nations. The wetland complex also provides habitat to numerous threatened species, including two Critically Endangered mammals found only in the Lac Alaotra wetland complex. Environmental managers must understand how people affect their local environment and how the environment, in turn, affects these people, their livelihoods, and their motivations for future natural resource use. Without an adequate understanding of the complex interactions of local people and their natural environment, it will be impossible to prevent, mitigate, or adapt to future unwanted changes in this complex social-ecological system. We used health assessments of 1 953 residents and semistructured interviews of members of 485 households in 1 9 communities within the Lac Alaotra wetland complex to investigate human-environmental interactions (including current natural resource use and hunting, and how these behaviors affect local economies and human wellbeing). Our team found that, while rates of wildlife consumption were very low throughout the region, the members of 485 surveyed households ate 975 mammals in 2013, including at least 1 6 Alaotra gentle lemurs. Thirteen percent of households had consumed wildlife in 201 3 and less than 1% of hunted wildlife was sold. Employment rates and annual income were both higher than other regions in Madagascar, and food costs were comparatively low. Nevertheless, 98% of households experienced food insecurity, and coping mechanisms (e.g.,  reducing portion sizes) appear to disproportionately affect young children and non-working members of households. Half of households did not receive the minimum recommended kilocalories per person per day. We found high rates of child malnutrition consistent with national rural statistics. While wildlife consumption does not appear to have significant economic or health benefits in the communities in the Alaotra wetland complex, high food insecurity significantly increased the number of forest and marshland mammals eaten by households. To improve child nutrition and wildlife conservation, we recommend targeted interventions that improve food security.
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