How does conservation land tenure affect economic impacts of wildlife: An analysis of subsistence farmers and herders in Bhutan

Protected areas (PA) to conserve wildlife are the cornerstone of biodiversity conservation but they can also result in increased human-wildlife conflict (HWC), which poses a serious challenge to jointly achieving sustainable development goals of food security and biodiversity conservation, particula...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yeshey, Rodney J. Keenan, Rebecca M. Ford, Craig R. Nitschke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023-03-01
Series:Trees, Forests and People
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666719323000109
_version_ 1797894419952697344
author Yeshey
Rodney J. Keenan
Rebecca M. Ford
Craig R. Nitschke
author_facet Yeshey
Rodney J. Keenan
Rebecca M. Ford
Craig R. Nitschke
author_sort Yeshey
collection DOAJ
description Protected areas (PA) to conserve wildlife are the cornerstone of biodiversity conservation but they can also result in increased human-wildlife conflict (HWC), which poses a serious challenge to jointly achieving sustainable development goals of food security and biodiversity conservation, particular in regions with high conservation values and subsistence farmers. In the Himalayan Kingdom of Bhutan, expanding PAs and other conservation efforts have led to increased wildlife populations that are causing more damage to crop and livestock and impacting on the livelihoods of subsistence farmers and herders. In this study, we used a social-ecological systems framework to quantify the intensity this impact and associated economic losses with identified wildlife species and compared differences between livelihood types (crop farming versus livestock husbandry) and land tenure (inside versus outside protected areas). Results indicated that Meso-scale wildlife species that are not the focus of conservation caused higher economic losses. Approximately 43% of total economic loss through crop depredation was attributed to wild pig (Sus scrofa) and 56% of the total economic loss through livestock predation was caused by wild dogs (Cuon alpinus). Losses borne by respondents whose livelihoods depend mainly on livestock were significantly higher, with a mean loss equivalent to US$1328 per household per annum, than those depending on crop production (US$171 per household per annum). Economic losses incurred through crop and livestock depredation were significantly higher for the respondents residing inside PAs, which is attributed by those households to a perceived increase in wildlife populations because of conservation policies. Interventions for prevention and mitigation of these impacts should recognize these varying unintended effects of wildlife and be better targeted at groups living in different parts of the landscape. These include expanding compensation scheme to losses caused by wild dogs and pigs, supporting ecotourism ventures within PAs to diversify income options and introducing control measures for these animals.
first_indexed 2024-04-10T07:08:46Z
format Article
id doaj.art-c162caf0f50b432bad7809b848ce9555
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2666-7193
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-10T07:08:46Z
publishDate 2023-03-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Trees, Forests and People
spelling doaj.art-c162caf0f50b432bad7809b848ce95552023-02-27T04:07:41ZengElsevierTrees, Forests and People2666-71932023-03-0111100378How does conservation land tenure affect economic impacts of wildlife: An analysis of subsistence farmers and herders in Bhutan Yeshey0Rodney J. Keenan1Rebecca M. Ford2Craig R. Nitschke3Corresponding author.; School of Ecosystem and Forest Sciences, Faculty of Science, The University of Melbourne, Victoria, 3121, AustraliaSchool of Ecosystem and Forest Sciences, Faculty of Science, The University of Melbourne, Victoria, 3121, AustraliaSchool of Ecosystem and Forest Sciences, Faculty of Science, The University of Melbourne, Victoria, 3121, AustraliaSchool of Ecosystem and Forest Sciences, Faculty of Science, The University of Melbourne, Victoria, 3121, AustraliaProtected areas (PA) to conserve wildlife are the cornerstone of biodiversity conservation but they can also result in increased human-wildlife conflict (HWC), which poses a serious challenge to jointly achieving sustainable development goals of food security and biodiversity conservation, particular in regions with high conservation values and subsistence farmers. In the Himalayan Kingdom of Bhutan, expanding PAs and other conservation efforts have led to increased wildlife populations that are causing more damage to crop and livestock and impacting on the livelihoods of subsistence farmers and herders. In this study, we used a social-ecological systems framework to quantify the intensity this impact and associated economic losses with identified wildlife species and compared differences between livelihood types (crop farming versus livestock husbandry) and land tenure (inside versus outside protected areas). Results indicated that Meso-scale wildlife species that are not the focus of conservation caused higher economic losses. Approximately 43% of total economic loss through crop depredation was attributed to wild pig (Sus scrofa) and 56% of the total economic loss through livestock predation was caused by wild dogs (Cuon alpinus). Losses borne by respondents whose livelihoods depend mainly on livestock were significantly higher, with a mean loss equivalent to US$1328 per household per annum, than those depending on crop production (US$171 per household per annum). Economic losses incurred through crop and livestock depredation were significantly higher for the respondents residing inside PAs, which is attributed by those households to a perceived increase in wildlife populations because of conservation policies. Interventions for prevention and mitigation of these impacts should recognize these varying unintended effects of wildlife and be better targeted at groups living in different parts of the landscape. These include expanding compensation scheme to losses caused by wild dogs and pigs, supporting ecotourism ventures within PAs to diversify income options and introducing control measures for these animals.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666719323000109Wildlife conservationLivelihoodEconomic lossCrop depredationLivestock depredationSustainable development
spellingShingle Yeshey
Rodney J. Keenan
Rebecca M. Ford
Craig R. Nitschke
How does conservation land tenure affect economic impacts of wildlife: An analysis of subsistence farmers and herders in Bhutan
Trees, Forests and People
Wildlife conservation
Livelihood
Economic loss
Crop depredation
Livestock depredation
Sustainable development
title How does conservation land tenure affect economic impacts of wildlife: An analysis of subsistence farmers and herders in Bhutan
title_full How does conservation land tenure affect economic impacts of wildlife: An analysis of subsistence farmers and herders in Bhutan
title_fullStr How does conservation land tenure affect economic impacts of wildlife: An analysis of subsistence farmers and herders in Bhutan
title_full_unstemmed How does conservation land tenure affect economic impacts of wildlife: An analysis of subsistence farmers and herders in Bhutan
title_short How does conservation land tenure affect economic impacts of wildlife: An analysis of subsistence farmers and herders in Bhutan
title_sort how does conservation land tenure affect economic impacts of wildlife an analysis of subsistence farmers and herders in bhutan
topic Wildlife conservation
Livelihood
Economic loss
Crop depredation
Livestock depredation
Sustainable development
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666719323000109
work_keys_str_mv AT yeshey howdoesconservationlandtenureaffecteconomicimpactsofwildlifeananalysisofsubsistencefarmersandherdersinbhutan
AT rodneyjkeenan howdoesconservationlandtenureaffecteconomicimpactsofwildlifeananalysisofsubsistencefarmersandherdersinbhutan
AT rebeccamford howdoesconservationlandtenureaffecteconomicimpactsofwildlifeananalysisofsubsistencefarmersandherdersinbhutan
AT craigrnitschke howdoesconservationlandtenureaffecteconomicimpactsofwildlifeananalysisofsubsistencefarmersandherdersinbhutan