Large carnivore conservation and traditional pastoralism: A case study on bear–reindeer predation mitigation measures

Author:

Tallian Aimee1ORCID,Støen Ole‐Gunnar2,Immerzeel Bart2,Kindberg Jonas13,Ordiz Andrés4,Persson Lars Thomas5,Segerström Peter2,Skarin Anna6,Stokke Rune7,Tveraa Torkild8,Åhman Birgitta6,Frank Jens9

Affiliation:

1. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research Trondheim Norway

2. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research Oslo Norway

3. Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Environmental Studies, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Umeå Sweden

4. Departamento de Biodiversidad y Gestión Ambiental, Área de Zoología, Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas y Ambientales Universidad de León León Spain

5. Udtja sameby Jokkmokk Sweden

6. Department of Animal Nutrition and Management Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Uppsala Sweden

7. Gällivare skogs sameby Nattavaaraby Sweden

8. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research Tromsø Norway

9. Grimsö Wildlife Research Station, Department of Ecology Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Riddarhyttan Sweden

Abstract

AbstractWhile wildlife and cultural preservation goals can be either complimentary or counteractive, the goals of large carnivore conservation and traditional pastoralist lifestyles are often at odds. Livestock depredation can negatively impact the economies of livestock herders, while subsequent lethal removals contribute to local carnivore population declines. Here, we collaborated with two Sámi reindeer herding communities (2010–2016) situated in Sweden's boreal forest to evaluate the efficacy and economic feasibility of three brown bear predation mitigation measures: corralling pregnant reindeer during parturition, lethal bear management removals, and public bear‐license hunting. Calving corrals increased survival for reindeer calves born to average‐sized females by 7%–15%, and by 14%–30% for calves born to small females. However, the realized cost of implementing calving corrals outweighed the financial gain for both our study areas (net losses ranged between €1111 and €6210 per calf saved from bear predation per year when using the updated 2021 calf value; 1€ [Euro] = US$1.1), as well as for almost every theoretical scenario we explored (net losses €234 and €13,995 per calf saved from bear predation). The exception was the theoretical scenario where small herding communities overlapped large bear populations, which crossed the breakeven efficacy bear/reindeer ratio of 13.5 bears/100 reindeer and had a potential net gain of €36 per saved calf. Similarly, the cost of lethal management removals of bears outweighed the potential financial gain from saved calves, with net losses between €75 and €239 per calf. License hunting, where the hunters voluntarily incur the monetary costs of removing bears, is in most cases the only economically viable mitigation measure where the cost of mitigation did not outweigh the financial gain from increased reindeer survival. While the annual public license hunt was the most cost‐effective mitigation measure, it may be less biologically effective, that is, bear hunting occurs in the fall and reindeer parturition the following spring which leaves time for the empty niche of harvested bears to be filled by survivors. Economically and biologically effective predation mitigation measures are key for promoting coexistence, and we suggest that potential mitigation measures should be studied in collaboration with local people.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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