Illegal Harvesting within a Protected Area: Spatial Distribution of Activities, Social Drivers of Wild Meat Consumption, and Wildlife Conservation

Author:

Bortolamiol Sarah12ORCID,Feuillet Thierry3ORCID,Kagoro Wilson4,Namirembe Rukia5,Asalu Edward4,Krief Sabrina26

Affiliation:

1. CNRS–UMR 7533 Laboratoire Dynamiques Sociales et Recomposition des Espaces (LADYSS), Campus Condorcet, 5 Cours des Humanités, 93322 Aubervilliers, France

2. Sebitoli Chimpanzee Project (SCP), Great Apes Conservation Project (GACP), Sebitoli Station, Kibale National Park, Fort Portal, Uganda

3. Department of Geography, Université de Caen Normandie, CNRS–UMR 6266 Identité et Différenciation de l’Espace, de l’Environnement et des Sociétés (IDEES), Campus 1, Esplanade de la Paix, 14032 Caen, France

4. Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA), Plot 7 Kira Road, Kampala P.O. Box 3530, Uganda

5. Rwenzori Commodities Ltd., Buzirasagama Tea Factory & Estates, Fort Portal P.O. Box 167, Uganda

6. Eco-Anthropologie (EA), Musée de l’Homme, Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, CNRS, Université de Paris, 17 Place du Trocadéro, 75116 Paris, France

Abstract

The African tropical forests host an inestimable number of resources, including food, medicine, vegetal and animal species. Among them, chimpanzees are threatened with extinction by human activities affecting their habitats, such as forest product harvesting, and/or more directly, snaring and trafficking. We aimed to better understand the spatial distribution of these illegal activities, and the reasons for setting snares and consuming wild meat in an agricultural landscape (subsistence farming and cash crops) densely populated near a protected area (Sebitoli, Northern part of Kibale National Park, Uganda). To carry out this study, we combined GPS records of illegal activities collected with group counts (in total, n = 339 tea workers, 678 villagers, and 1885 children) and individual interviews (n = 74 tea workers, 42 villagers, and 35 children). A quarter of illegal activities collected (n = 1661) targeted animal resources and about 60% were recorded in specific areas (southwest and northeast) of the Sebitoli chimpanzee home range. Wild meat consumption, which is illegal in Uganda, is a relatively common practice among participants (17.1% to 54.1% of respondents depending on actor types and census methods). However, consumers declared that they eat wild meat unfrequently (0.6 to 2.8 times per year). Being a young man coming from districts contiguous to Kibale National Park particularly raises the odds of consuming wild meat. Such an analysis contributes to the understanding of wild meat hunting among traditional rural and agricultural societies from East Africa.

Funder

Fondation Prince Albert II de Monaco and the Great Ape Conservation Project

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

Reference111 articles.

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