4.6 Article

Participatory Planning of Interventions to Mitigate Human-Wildlife Conflicts

Journal

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 6, Pages 1577-1587

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01242.x

Keywords

animal damage; co-management; conservation actions; decision support; depredation; feasibility criteria; problematic animals; tolerance

Funding

  1. International Bear Association
  2. Pittsburgh Zoo Conservation Fund
  3. COEX

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Conservation of wildlife is especially challenging when the targeted species damage crops or livestock, attack humans, or take fish or game. Affected communities may retaliate and destroy wildlife or their habitats. We summarize recommendations from the literature for 13 distinct types of interventions to mitigate these human-wildlife conflicts. We classified eight types as direct (reducing the severity or frequency of encounters with wildlife) and five as indirect (raising human tolerance for encounters with wildlife) interventions. We analyzed general cause-and-effect relationships underlying human-wildlife conflicts to clarify the focal point of intervention for each type. To organize the recommendations on interventions we used three standard criteria for feasibility: cost-effective design, wildlife specificity and selectivity, and sociopolitical acceptability. The literature review and the feasibility criteria were integrated as decision support tools in three multistakeholder workshops. The workshops validated and refined our criteria and helped the participants select interventions. Our approach to planning interventions is systematic, uses standard criteria, and optimizes the participation of experts, policy makers, and affected communities. We argue that conservation action generally will be more effective if the relative merits of alternative interventions are evaluated in an explicit, systematic, and participatory manner.

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