Carter Neil H, López-Bao José Vicente, Bruskotter Jeremy T, Gore Meredith, Chapron Guillaume, Johnson Arlyne, Epstein Yaffa, Shrestha Mahendra, Frank Jens, Ohrens Omar, Treves Adrian
Human-Environment Systems Research Center, Boise State University, 1910 University Dr., Boise, ID, 83725, USA.
Research Unit of Biodiversity (UO/CSIC/PA), Oviedo University, Gonzalo Gutiérrez Quirós s/n, 33600, Mieres, Spain.
Ambio. 2017 Apr;46(3):251-264. doi: 10.1007/s13280-016-0852-z. Epub 2016 Nov 16.
The growing complexity and global nature of wildlife poaching threaten the survival of many species worldwide and are outpacing conservation efforts. Here, we reviewed proximal and distal factors, both social and ecological, driving illegal killing or poaching of large carnivores at sites where it can potentially occur. Through this review, we developed a conceptual social-ecological system framework that ties together many of the factors influencing large carnivore poaching. Unlike most conservation action models, an important attribute of our framework is the integration of multiple factors related to both human motivations and animal vulnerability into feedbacks. We apply our framework to two case studies, tigers in Laos and wolverines in northern Sweden, to demonstrate its utility in disentangling some of the complex features of carnivore poaching that may have hindered effective responses to the current poaching crisis. Our framework offers a common platform to help guide future research on wildlife poaching feedbacks, which has hitherto been lacking, in order to effectively inform policy making and enforcement.
野生动物偷猎活动日益复杂且具有全球性,威胁着全球许多物种的生存,且其速度超过了保护工作的步伐。在此,我们审视了推动在可能发生大型食肉动物非法捕杀或偷猎的地点进行此类行为的社会和生态近端及远端因素。通过此次审视,我们构建了一个概念性社会生态系统框架,该框架将影响大型食肉动物偷猎的诸多因素联系在一起。与大多数保护行动模型不同,我们框架的一个重要特性是将与人类动机和动物易受伤害性相关的多个因素整合到反馈之中。我们将我们的框架应用于两个案例研究,即老挝的老虎和瑞典北部的狼獾,以证明其在梳理食肉动物偷猎的一些复杂特征方面的效用,这些特征可能阻碍了对当前偷猎危机的有效应对。我们的框架提供了一个共同平台,以帮助指导此前一直缺乏的关于野生动物偷猎反馈的未来研究,从而有效地为政策制定和执法提供信息。