Centre for Ecosystem Science, School of BEES, University of New South Wales (UNSW Sydney), Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia.
Taronga Institute of Science and Learning, Taronga Conservation Society Australia, Taronga Western Plains Zoo, Dubbo, NSW, 2830, Australia.
Conserv Biol. 2020 Aug;34(4):803-810. doi: 10.1111/cobi.13471. Epub 2020 May 14.
Millennia of human conflict with wildlife have built a culture of intolerance toward wildlife among some stakeholders. We explored 2 key obstacles to improved human-wildlife coexistence: coexistence inequality (how the costs and benefits of coexisting with wildlife are unequally shared) and intolerance. The costs of coexisting with wildlife are often disproportionately borne by the so-called global south and rural communities, and the benefits often flow to the global north and urban dwellers. Attitudes and behaviors toward wildlife (tolerance versus intolerance) vary with social and cultural norms. We suggest more empathetic advocacy is needed that, for example, promotes conservation while appropriately considering those who bear the costs of conflict with wildlife. To achieve more equitable cost-sharing, we suggest limiting the costs incurred by those most affected or by sharing those costs more widely. For example, we advocate for the development of improved wildlife compensation schemes, increasing the scale of rewilding efforts, and preventing wildlife-derived revenue leaching out of the local communities bearing the costs of coexistence.
千百年来,人类与野生动物之间的冲突在一些利益相关者中形成了对野生动物的不容忍文化。我们探讨了改善人与野生动物共存的 2 个关键障碍:共存不平等(与野生动物共存的成本和收益如何不平等地分配)和不容忍。与野生动物共存的成本往往不成比例地由所谓的南方国家和农村社区承担,而收益往往流向北方国家和城市居民。对野生动物的态度和行为(宽容与不容忍)因社会和文化规范而异。我们建议需要更有同理心的宣传,例如,在适当考虑与野生动物发生冲突的人承担的成本的同时,促进保护。为了实现更公平的成本分担,我们建议限制受影响最大的人的成本,或更广泛地分担这些成本。例如,我们主张制定改进的野生动物补偿计划,扩大重新野化工作的规模,并防止野生动物衍生的收入从承担共存成本的当地社区中流失。