Author:
Wang Junjie,Yu Yu,Wang Xuechun
Abstract
The Maasai Mara National Reserve is rated as one of the seven natural wonders of Africa and one of the ten wonders of the world. To reduce the impact of human activities on wildlife and further consolidate the balance between humans and nature, this paper proposes a research analysis method for the Massai Mara National Reserve. First, the influencing factors were divided into four indicators: wildlife, economy, resident life and non-animal resources. For these four indicators, eight main factors are further divided, including employment, native resource destruction, poaching, injuries to personnel, crop destruction, causing dissatisfaction among tourists, revenue brought in by tourists, the cost of conserving biological resources. The relationship between these factors and indicators produced the influence on the number of visitors and the development trend of human footprint. Subsequently, the reasons for these important indicators are analyzed, and corresponding solutions are put forward, such as strengthening the management of protected areas, expanding the scope of protected areas, and formulating unified charging standards.
Reference10 articles.
1. [1] Walpole, M; Karanja, GG; Sitati, NW; Leadr-Williams. Wildlife and People: Conflict and Conservation in Masai Mara, Kenya (PDF). Wildlife and Development Series (London: International Institute for Environment and Development), 2003, 14. ISBN 1843694166.
2. [2] Kimanzi, J. K., and J. N. Wangyigi. "The Declining Endangered Roan Antelope Population in Kenya: What Is the Way Forward?" Conference Papers in Science 2014: 1 - 6.
3. [3] Saikia, J., Buragohain, P.P. and Choudhury, H.K. "Attribute perception and tourist’s choice for wildlife tourism destination", International Journal of Culture, Tourism and Hospitality Research, 2019, Vol. 13 No. 3, pp. 346-358. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCTHR-05 - 2019 - 0078.
4. [4] Kathleen Krafte Holland, Lincoln R. Larson, Robert B. Powell, W. Hunter Holland, Lawrence Allen, Moriaso Nabaala, Salaton Tome, Simon Seno & James Nampushi. Impacts of tourism on support for conservation, local livelihoods, and community resilience around Maasai Mara National Reserve, Kenya, Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 2021. DOI: 10.1080/09669582.2021.1932927.
5. [5] Green, D. S., et al. "Long-term ecological changes influence herbivore diversity and abundance inside a protected area in the Mara-Serengeti ecosystem." Global Ecology and Conservation, 2019, 20.