Human-carnivore conflict mitigation and lion population viability in Uganda's Queen Elizabeth National Park

被引:0
|
作者
Schwartz, Michael W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Uganda Carnivore Program, Kampala, Uganda
来源
FRONTIERS IN CONSERVATION SCIENCE | 2024年 / 5卷
关键词
lion (Panthera leo); conservation; human-carnivore conflict; Uganda; Queen Elizabeth National Park; Queen Elizabeth Conservation Area; compensation; carnivore; PANTHERA-LEO; CONSERVATION; PREDATOR;
D O I
10.3389/fcosc.2024.1393399
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
The Uganda Carnivore Program (UCP), located in Queen Elizabeth National Park (QENP), has-among other large carnivore research and conservation measures-engaged in human-carnivore conflict mitigation and prevention efforts since 2015. UCP's experiential lion tourism program funds compensation to local communities for livestock losses to promote carnivore tolerance and conservation. But while UCP's conflict mitigation and prevention trials-through direct payments in response to forensically determined cases of livestock depredation by lion (Panthera leo)-may be aiding in the goal of maintaining lion viability in QENP and the greater Queen Elizabeth Conservation Area (QECA), compensation does not preclude ongoing challenges. These include unsustainable resource uses from human population growth and illegal expansions, subsequent land use changes, illegal livestock grazing and related husbandry practices, and compensation financing shortages. Of note regarding compensation is assessing whether claims of livestock depredation are genuine or not. Nevertheless, disruption to UCP's experiential lion tourism and compensation programs could result in increased retaliatory killings of lions, thus further reducing an already low lion population. As compensation includes the area's large carnivore guild, disruption could also mean further reductions in leopard (Panthera pardus) and spotted hyena (Crocuta crocuta) populations from retaliatory killings. Based on a perspective of UCP's compensation trials and related challenges, several recommendations, including the introduction of compensation percentage rates based on rewards-based frameworks, would strengthen human-carnivore conflict mitigation as part of lion and other large carnivore conservation. This would benefit QENP, greater QECA, and other protected areas where people, livestock, and large carnivores share space.
引用
收藏
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Implications of taxonomic bias for human-carnivore conflict mitigation
    Hoffmann, Claire F.
    Montgomery, Robert A.
    ORYX, 2022, 56 (06) : 917 - 926
  • [2] Discordant scales and the potential pitfalls for human-carnivore conflict mitigation
    Montgomery, Robert A.
    Hoffmann, Claire F.
    Tans, Eric D.
    Kissui, Bernard
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2018, 224 : 170 - 177
  • [3] Identification of human-carnivore conflict hotspots to prioritize mitigation efforts
    Broekhuis, Femke
    Cushman, Samuel A.
    Elliot, Nicholas B.
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2017, 7 (24): : 10630 - 10639
  • [4] Human-carnivore conflicts in a recently established Pakistani national park
    Khatoon, Rukhsana
    Anwar, Maqsood
    Nilon, Charles H.
    Gompper, Matthew E.
    HUMAN-WILDLIFE INTERACTIONS, 2022, 16 (01): : 144 - 157
  • [5] Predicting the patterns, perceptions and causes of human-carnivore conflict in and around Machiara National Park, Pakistan
    Dar, Naeem Iftikhar
    Minhas, Riaz Aziz
    Zaman, Qamar
    Linkie, Matthew
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2009, 142 (10) : 2076 - 2082
  • [6] Spatio-temporal patterns of human-carnivore conflict and mitigation in Pakistan
    Danish, Muhammad
    Mahmood, Tariq
    Akrim, Faraz
    Nadeem, Muhammad Sajid
    Noreen, Shumaila
    Munawar, Nadeem
    Shakil, Muhammad
    Arshad, Muhammad
    JOURNAL FOR NATURE CONSERVATION, 2023, 76
  • [7] Assessing human-carnivore conflict and the identification of hotspot areas to prioritize mitigation efforts
    Malekian, Mansoureh
    Rezvani, Azita
    Jazireh, Narges
    HUMAN DIMENSIONS OF WILDLIFE, 2024, 29 (04) : 401 - 415
  • [9] DISTRIBUTION OF LARGER HERBIVORES IN QUEEN-ELIZABETH-NATIONAL-PARK, UGANDA
    FIELD, CR
    LAWS, RM
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 1970, 7 (02) : 273 - +
  • [10] Carnivores and Communities: A Case Study of Human-Carnivore Conflict Mitigation in Southwestern Alberta
    Morehouse, Andrea T.
    Hughes, Courtney
    Manners, Nora
    Bectell, Jeff
    Bruder, Tony
    FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2020, 8