Importance of private and communal lands to sustainable conservation of Africa's rhinoceroses

Author:

Clements Hayley S12,Balfour Dave3,Di Minin Enrico145

Affiliation:

1. Helsinki Lab of Interdisciplinary Conservation Science, Department of Geosciences and Geography University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

2. Centre for Sustainability Transitions Stellenbosch University Stellenbosch South Africa

3. Centre for African Conservation Ecology, Zoology Department Nelson Mandela University Port Elizabeth South Africa

4. Helsinki Institute of Sustainability Science University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

5. School of Life Sciences University of KwaZulu‐Natal Durban South Africa

Abstract

A new path for rhinoceros (rhino) conservation is needed. Recent data signal the alarming impact of poaching on populations in Africa's rhino stronghold, the state‐run Kruger National Park (South Africa), which today supports one quarter the rhinos than a decade ago. We aggregated African rhino population data, highlighting the growing role of private and community rhino custodians, who likely now conserve >50% of Africa's rhinos. Their contribution has been enabled by a supportive policy and economic environment, but this arrangement is becoming more difficult to sustain as costs associated with protecting rhinos skyrocket and revenue‐generating options become insufficient. Some privately held rhino populations are small or intensively managed, raising questions about their conservation value. As the role of private and community custodianship becomes increasingly central to the protection of Africa's remaining rhinos, its resilience must be strengthened through implementation of adaptive policies that incentivize rhino conservation. We outline policy pathways to provide an enabling environment for rhino conservation beyond state parks.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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