Attitudes and Perceptions of Local Communities towards Nile Crocodiles (Crocodylus niloticus) in the Sudd Wetlands, South Sudan

Author:

Benansio John Sebit12,Damaya Gift Simon2,Funk Stephan M.3ORCID,Fa Julia E.45ORCID,Di Vittorio Massimiliano6,Dendi Daniele789ORCID,Luiselli Luca789ORCID

Affiliation:

1. AERD—Alliance for Environment and Rural Development, El Hikma Medical Centre Street, Gudele West, Block II., Juba P.O. Box 445, South Sudan

2. Department of Wildlife Science, University of Juba, Juba P.O. Box 82, South Sudan

3. NatureHeritage, St. Lawrence, Jersey, Channel Island JE2 3NG, UK

4. Department of Natural Sciences, School of Science and the Environment, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester M1 5GD, UK

5. Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), CIFOR Headquarters, Bogor 16115, Indonesia

6. Ecologia Applicata Italia s.r.l., Termini Imerese, 90018 Palermo, Italy

7. Institute for Development Ecology Conservation and Cooperation, Via G. Tomasi di Lampedusa 33, 00144 Rome, Italy

8. Department of Applied and Environmental Biology, Rivers State University of Science and Technology, Port Harcourt P.M.B. 5080, Nigeria

9. Département de Zoologie et Biologie Animale, Faculté des Sciences, Université de Lomé, 101 B.P., Lomé 1515, Togo

Abstract

Conflicts between human populations and Nile crocodiles are widespread with crocodiles posing significant threats to fisherfolk and riverine communities across r-Saharan Africa. Hundreds of deadly attacks take place annually, and mortality rates may range from 50% to 100%. Attitudes and perceptions towards crocodiles were studied using structured questionnaires among fisherfolk along the River Nile and the Sudd wetlands in South Sudan. Local communities used crocodiles for their meat and skin/leather trades. The meat is regarded to enhance longevity, sexual potency, and protection against witchcraft. Crocodiles are perceived as a main threat to lives and livelihoods as they restrict people’s freedom of movement along water bodies, attack livestock and humans, and devastate fishing equipment. To assess whether responses were influenced by the intensity of crocodile threats, published data on fatal crocodile attacks on humans and livestock were analysed using Generalised Linear Models (GLMs). This analysis indicated a direct link between the number of crocodile attacks and human attitudes. Crocodiles were generally feared and hated, and there was the agreement of the need to destroy breeding habitats. However, some attitudes were complex and nuanced as highlighted by the agreement of local communities on the need to destroy Nile Crocodile breeding habitats on the one hand and the need to establish crocodile sanctuaries as the the preferred strategy to mitigate risks and conflict on the other hand. There is a need for the creation of a crocodile sanctuary in the Sudd wetlands to minimise the risks of illegal hunting and to buffer the increasing pressure on crocodiles due to human population growth and economic upturn after the civil war.

Funder

Alliance for Environment and Rural Development

Rainforest Trust

Publisher

MDPI AG

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