Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Clinical Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.
Am J Primatol. 2021 Jan;83(1):e23217. doi: 10.1002/ajp.23217. Epub 2020 Nov 23.
Poaching and habitat destruction in the Congo Basin threaten African great apes including the bonobo (Pan paniscus), chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes), and gorillas (Gorilla spp.) with extinction. One way to combat extinction is to reintroduce rescued and rehabilitated apes and repopulate native habitats. Reintroduction programs are only successful if they are supported by local populations. Ekolo ya Bonobo, located in Equateur province of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), is the world's only reintroduction site for rehabilitated bonobos. Here we assess whether children, of the Ilonga-Pôo, living adjacent to Ekolo ya Bonobo demonstrate more pro-ape conservation attitudes than children living in, Kinshasa, the capital city. We examined children's attitudes toward great apes because children are typically the focus of conservation education programs. We used the Great Ape Attitude Questionnaire to test the Contact Hypothesis, which posits that proximity to great ape habitat influences pro-conservation attitudes toward great apes. Ilonga-Pôo children who live in closer contact with wild bonobos felt greater responsibility to protect great apes compared to those in Kinshasa who live outside the natural habitat of great apes. These results suggest that among participants in the DRC, spatial proximity to a species fosters a greater sense of responsibility to protect and conserve. These results have implications for the successful implementation of great ape reintroduction programs in the Congo Basin. The data analyzed in this study were collected in 2010 and therefore provide a baseline for longitudinal study of this reintroduction site.
在刚果盆地,偷猎和栖息地破坏威胁着包括倭黑猩猩(Pan paniscus)、黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)和大猩猩(Gorilla spp.)在内的非洲大猿类濒临灭绝。对抗灭绝的一种方法是重新引入获救和康复的猿类,并重新 populate 本土栖息地。只有在得到当地人口的支持下,重新引入计划才会成功。位于刚果民主共和国(DRC)赤道省的埃科洛亚邦博(Ekolo ya Bonobo)是世界上唯一一个对康复后的倭黑猩猩进行重新引入的地点。在这里,我们评估了居住在埃科洛亚邦博附近的伊隆加-波乌(Ilonga-Pôo)儿童与居住在首都金沙萨(Kinshasa)的儿童相比,是否表现出更多的支持保护猿类的态度。我们研究了儿童对大猿类的态度,因为儿童通常是保护教育计划的重点。我们使用大猿类态度问卷来检验接触假说,该假说认为,接近大猿类栖息地会影响对大猿类的保护态度。与生活在远离大猿类自然栖息地的金沙萨的儿童相比,与野生倭黑猩猩更接近接触的伊隆加-波乌儿童感到有更大的责任保护大猿类。这些结果表明,在刚果民主共和国的参与者中,与一个物种的空间接近程度会促使人们产生更大的责任感来保护和保护该物种。这些结果对在刚果盆地成功实施大猿类重新引入计划具有重要意义。本研究分析的数据于 2010 年收集,因此为该重新引入地点的纵向研究提供了基线。