Assessing protected area effectiveness in western Tanzania: Insights from repeated line transect surveys

Author:

Kiffner Christian12ORCID,Giliba Richard A.34ORCID,Fust Pascal4ORCID,Loos Jacqueline45ORCID,Waltert Matthias6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Junior Research Group Human‐Wildlife Conflict and Coexistence Leibniz Centre for Agricultural Landscape Research (ZALF), Research Area Land use and Governance Müncheberg Germany

2. Department of Human Behavior Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Ecology and Culture Leipzig Germany

3. School of Life Sciences and Bio‐Engineering The Nelson Mandela African Institution of Science and Technology Arusha Tanzania

4. Institute of Ecology Leuphana University Lüneburg Lüneburg Germany

5. Social‐Ecological Systems Institute Leuphana University Lüneburg Lüneburg Germany

6. Department of Conservation Biology Georg‐August Universität Göttingen Göttingen Germany

Abstract

AbstractIn many parts of East Africa, wildlife populations have declined over the past decades. Given these trends, site‐based studies are needed to assess how protected areas with differing management strategies enable the effective conservation of wildlife populations. In Tanzania, game reserves are managed for tourist hunting, while national parks are managed for non‐consumptive wildlife‐based tourism. To assess the relative performance of these management strategies, we here focus on two areas: Rukwa Game Reserve (RGR) and Katavi National Park (KNP). Based on systematically designed line distance surveys in 2004 and 2021, we compared densities and group sizes of large mammal populations (African elephant, giraffe, buffalo, zebra, topi, and hartebeest) over time. Contrary to published ecosystem‐wide declines observed in numerous species which considered earlier baselines, we did not detect significant population declines between 2004 and 2021. While these new results showing apparent stable populations do not invalidate earlier studies on wildlife declines, they could indicate a stabilisation phase after declines. This highlights the importance of considering appropriate temporal baselines and historical contexts when assessing conservation effectiveness.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference74 articles.

1. Chinese transnational criminal organisations and the illegal wildlife trade in Tanzania;Alden C.;The European Review of Organised Crime,2021

2. The woodland vegetation of the Katavi-Rukwa ecosystem in western Tanzania

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