School of Life and Environmental Sciences, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, New South Wales, 2006, Australia.
School of Environment and Forest Sciences, The University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, 98115-2100, U.S.A.
Conserv Biol. 2020 Oct;34(5):1165-1175. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13488. Epub 2020 May 9.
Understanding human attitudes toward wildlife management is critical to implementing effective conservation action and policy. Understanding the factors that shape public attitudes toward different wildlife management actions is limited, however, which can result in unpredictable public responses to interventions. We drew on comparisons between residents of 2 countries on separate continents to explore differences in attitudes toward wildlife management and determine factors important in shaping these attitudes. We surveyed representative publics via market research panels in Australia (n = 881 respondents) and the United States (n = 1287). We applied a social-identity approach and demography to identify factors that explained variance between responses about wildlife management. We compared responses between countries overall and within subgroups of respondents who strongly identified as environmentalists, animal rights activists, wildlife conservation advocates, and farmers. We created aggregate scores for the management-related response items per respondent and used regression analyses to identify the relative importance of country, identity, age, and gender in explaining variance between responses. These factors accounted for 15.3% of variance among responses. Australians overall were generally more accepting of lethal wildlife management actions than U.S. respondents. Differences in national attitudes reflected differences between United States and Australian wildlife management and policy, highlighting the importance of understanding social attitudes in shaping conservation policy. Identifying as a farmer followed by identifying as an animal rights activist most shaped attitudes toward wildlife management. Identity-related conflicts could be initiated or exacerbated by conservation interventions that fail to consider identity-related processes.
了解人类对野生动物管理的态度对于实施有效的保护行动和政策至关重要。然而,对于影响公众对不同野生动物管理行动的态度的因素的了解有限,这可能导致公众对干预措施的反应不可预测。我们通过对两个位于不同大陆的国家的居民进行比较,探讨了对野生动物管理态度的差异,并确定了影响这些态度的重要因素。我们通过市场研究小组在澳大利亚(n=881 名受访者)和美国(n=1287 名受访者)对代表性公众进行了调查。我们应用社会认同方法和人口统计学来确定解释野生动物管理相关反应差异的因素。我们比较了总体而言和在强烈认同环保主义者、动物权利活动家、野生动物保护倡导者和农民身份的受访者亚组内的国家之间的反应。我们为每位受访者创建了与管理相关的反应项目的综合得分,并使用回归分析来确定国家、身份、年龄和性别在解释反应差异中的相对重要性。这些因素解释了反应差异的 15.3%。总体而言,澳大利亚人比美国受访者更能接受致命的野生动物管理行动。国家态度的差异反映了美国和澳大利亚野生动物管理和政策之间的差异,突出了在制定保护政策时了解社会态度的重要性。认同自己是农民,其次是认同自己是动物权利活动家,这最能影响对野生动物管理的态度。忽视与身份相关的过程的保护干预措施可能引发或加剧与身份相关的冲突。