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Warfare and wildlife declines in Africa’s protected areas
Assessment of the impact of armed conflict on large herbivores in Africa between 1946 and 2010 reveals that high conflict frequency is an important predictor of wildlife population declines. African wildlife compromised by conflict The effect of armed conflict on wildlife populations is debated. Jos...
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Published in: | Nature (London) 2018-01, Vol.553 (7688), p.328-332 |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Assessment of the impact of armed conflict on large herbivores in Africa between 1946 and 2010 reveals that high conflict frequency is an important predictor of wildlife population declines.
African wildlife compromised by conflict
The effect of armed conflict on wildlife populations is debated. Joshua Daskin and Robert Pringle assess the impact of armed conflict on 253 populations of large herbivores in protected areas across Africa, using data collected between 1946 and 2010. Armed conflict affected more than 70% of the studied areas over this period, with population growth rates decreasing with increased conflict frequency—the single most important predictor of wildlife population trends. The researchers suggest that sustained conservation efforts in conflict zones and rapid interventions following ceasefires could help to safeguard many at-risk populations and species.
Large-mammal populations are ecological linchpins
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, and their worldwide decline
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and extinction
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disrupts many ecosystem functions and services
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. Reversal of this trend will require an understanding of the determinants of population decline, to enable more accurate predictions of when and where collapses will occur and to guide the development of effective conservation and restoration policies
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,
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. Many correlates of large-mammal declines are known, including low reproductive rates, overhunting, and habitat destruction
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,
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,
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. However, persistent uncertainty about the effects of one widespread factor—armed conflict—complicates conservation-planning and priority-setting efforts
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,
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. Case studies have revealed that conflict can have either positive or negative local impacts on wildlife
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,
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,
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, but the direction and magnitude of its net effect over large spatiotemporal scales have not previously been quantified
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. Here we show that conflict frequency predicts the occurrence and severity of population declines among wild large herbivores in African protected areas from 1946 to 2010. Conflict was extensive during this period, occurring in 71% of protected areas, and conflict frequency was the single most important predictor of wildlife population trends among the variables that we analysed. Population trajectories were stable in peacetime, fell significantly below replacement with only slight increases in conflict frequency (one conflict-year per two-to-five decades), and were almost invariably negative in high-conflict sites, both in the full 65-year dataset and in an a |
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ISSN: | 0028-0836 1476-4687 |
DOI: | 10.1038/nature25194 |