Analysis of differences and commonalities in wildlife hunting across the Africa-Europe South-North gradient

Author:

Bachmann Mona EstrellaORCID,Kulik Lars,Gatiso TsegayeORCID,Nielsen Martin ReinhardtORCID,Haase Dagmar,Heurich MarcoORCID,Buchadas AnaORCID,Bösch Lukas,Eirdosh DustinORCID,Freytag Andreas,Geldmann JonasORCID,Ghoddousi ArashORCID,Hicks Thurston Cleveland,Ordaz-Németh IsabelORCID,Qin SiyuORCID,Sop Tenekwetche,van Beeck Calkoen SuzanneORCID,Wesche Karsten,Kühl Hjalmar S.ORCID

Abstract

Hunting and its impacts on wildlife are typically studied regionally, with a particular focus on the Global South. Hunting can, however, also undermine rewilding efforts or threaten wildlife in the Global North. Little is known about how hunting manifests under varying socioeconomic and ecological contexts across the Global South and North. Herein, we examined differences and commonalities in hunting characteristics across an exemplary Global South-North gradient approximated by the Human Development Index (HDI) using face-to-face interviews with 114 protected area (PA) managers in 25 African and European countries. Generally, we observed that hunting ranges from the illegal, economically motivated, and unsustainable hunting of herbivores in the South to the legal, socially and ecologically motivated hunting of ungulates within parks and the illegal hunting of mainly predators outside parks in the North. Commonalities across this Africa-Europe South-North gradient included increased conflict-related killings in human-dominated landscapes and decreased illegal hunting with beneficial community conditions, such as mutual trust resulting from community involvement in PA management. Nevertheless, local conditions cannot outweigh the strong effect of the HDI on unsustainable hunting. Our findings highlight regional challenges that require collaborative, integrative efforts in wildlife conservation across actors, while identified commonalities may outline universal mechanisms for achieving this goal.

Funder

German Center for Integrative Biodiversity Research

Robert Bosch Stiftung

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Neuroscience

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