Large carnivore encounters through the lens of mobile videos on social media

Author:

Gao Yufang123ORCID,Lee Andy T. L.34ORCID,Luo Yu5,Alexander Justine Shanti67ORCID,Shi Xiangying89,Sangpo Tashi10,Clark Susan G.1

Affiliation:

1. School of the Environment Yale University New Haven Connecticut USA

2. Department of Anthropology Yale University New Haven Connecticut USA

3. China Conservation Support Beijing China

4. RESOLVE Washington District of Columbia USA

5. Department of Sociology and Anthropology University of Puget Sound Tacoma Washington USA

6. The Snow Leopard Trust Seattle Washington USA

7. Department of Ecology and Evolution University of Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland

8. Shanshui Conservation Center Beijing China

9. College of Environmental Science and Engineering Peking University Beijing China

10. Nyanpo Yutse Conservation Association Jiuzhi China

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding local encounters with large carnivores is important for promoting sustainable coexistence. The use of smartphones and social media in geographically remote areas offers a novel avenue to study human–wildlife encounters from a local perspective. We conducted a content analysis of mobile videos on social media (n = 207) to characterize human encounters with snow leopards, gray wolves, and brown bears on the Tibetan Plateau in China. We also used ethnographic interviews to understand the backgrounds and motivations of videographers. Results show large carnivore encounters are not necessarily conflictual. Over half of encounters are neutral without observable interference between people and predators. The likelihood of a “negative encounter” is significantly associated with the target species, the distance between the videographer and the animal, the level of human influence in the surroundings, and the presence of other animals (i.e., dogs and livestock). Local Tibetan herders document unusual encounters with carnivores using videos for various reasons, but what is deemed unusual is context‐dependent and fluid. Our study demonstrates that social media videos can provide valuable insights into the diversity and complexity of human–wildlife interactions. We encourage conservationists to develop visual participatory programs to better engage local people in conservation knowledge production.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Environmental Science (miscellaneous),Ecology,Global and Planetary Change

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