Consequences of integrating livestock and wildlife in an African savanna

被引:0
|
作者
Felicia Keesing
Richard S. Ostfeld
Sharon Okanga
Steven Huckett
Brett R. Bayles
Rebecca Chaplin-Kramer
L. Page Fredericks
Tyler Hedlund
Virginia Kowal
Heather Tallis
Charles M. Warui
Spencer A. Wood
Brian F. Allan
机构
[1] Bard College,Department of Entomology
[2] Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies,Department of Health Sciences
[3] University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,Natural Capital Project, Woods Institute for the Environment
[4] Dominican University of California,Department of Biological Sciences
[5] Stanford University,School of Environmental and Forest Sciences
[6] The Nature Conservancy,undefined
[7] Office of the Chief Scientist,undefined
[8] Murang’a University of Technology,undefined
[9] University of Washington,undefined
来源
Nature Sustainability | 2018年 / 1卷
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摘要
Globally, most wildlife lives outside of protected areas, creating potential conflicts between the needs of wildlife and the needs of humans. East African savannas epitomize this challenge, providing habitat for wildlife such as giraffes and elephants as well as for people and their livestock. Conflicts over land use are common, leading to the assumption of a necessary trade-off between wildlife and livestock management. Here, we show that the integration of livestock and wildlife in a large region of central Kenya can have ecological benefits, reducing the abundance of ticks and improving forage. These ecological benefits can be complemented by economic ones when property owners derive income both from wildlife through tourism and from livestock through meat and dairy production. Our results suggest that under specific ecological, economic and social conditions, integrating livestock with wildlife can provide benefits for the environment and for human well-being in African savannas.
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页码:566 / 573
页数:7
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