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大黄石地区的性掠夺者、能源开发与保护。

Sexual predators, energy development, and conservation in greater Yellowstone.

机构信息

Division of Biological Sciences, and Northern Rockies Field Office, Wildlife Conservation Society, University of Montana, Missoula, MT 59812, USA.

出版信息

Conserv Biol. 2010 Jun;24(3):891-6. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2010.01449.x. Epub 2010 Feb 19.

Abstract

In the United States, as elsewhere, a growing debate pits national energy policy and homeland security against biological conservation. In rural communities the extraction of fossil fuels is often encouraged because of the employment opportunities it offers, although the concomitant itinerant workforce is often associated with increased wildlife poaching. We explored possible positive and negative factors associated with energy extraction in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE), an area known for its national parks, intact biological diversity, and some of the New World's longest terrestrial migrations. Specifically, we asked whether counties with different economies-recreation (ski), agrarian (ranching or farming), and energy extractive (petroleum)-differed in healthcare (gauged by the abundance of hospital beds) and in the frequency of sexual predators. The absolute and relative frequency of registered sex offenders grew approximately two to three times faster in areas reliant on energy extraction. Healthcare among counties did not differ. The strong conflation of community dishevel, as reflected by in-migrant sexual predators, and ecological decay in Greater Yellowstone is consistent with patterns seen in similar systems from Ecuador to northern Canada, where social and environmental disarray exist around energy boomtowns. In our case, that groups (albeit with different aims) mobilized campaigns to help maintain the quality of rural livelihoods by protecting open space is a positive sign that conservation can matter, especially in the face of rampant and poorly executed energy extraction projects. Our findings further suggest that the public and industry need stronger regulatory action to instill greater vigilance when and where social factors and land conversion impact biological systems.

摘要

在美国,与其他地方一样,一场关于国家能源政策和国土安全与生物保护的争论愈演愈烈。在农村社区,由于化石燃料的开采提供了就业机会,因此通常会鼓励进行这种开采,尽管随之而来的流动劳动力往往与野生动物偷猎的增加有关。我们探讨了与大黄石生态系统(GYE)能源开采相关的一些可能的积极和消极因素,该地区以其国家公园、完整的生物多样性和一些新世界最长的陆地迁徙而闻名。具体来说,我们询问了经济(滑雪)、农业(牧场或农业)和能源开采(石油)不同的县在医疗保健(以医院床位的丰富程度衡量)和性侵犯者的频率方面是否存在差异。在依赖能源开采的地区,登记在册的性犯罪者的绝对和相对频率增长了大约两到三倍。各县的医疗保健水平没有差异。大黄石地区社区混乱的强烈融合,反映在移民性侵犯者身上,以及生态衰退,与从厄瓜多尔到加拿大北部的类似系统中看到的模式一致,在这些系统中,能源繁荣城镇周围存在社会和环境混乱。在我们的案例中,尽管目标不同,但一些团体动员了运动,通过保护开放空间来帮助维持农村生计的质量,这是一个积极的迹象,表明保护可以发挥作用,尤其是在面对猖獗且执行不力的能源开采项目时。我们的研究结果进一步表明,公众和行业需要更强大的监管行动,以在社会因素和土地转换影响生物系统时提高警惕。

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