The Living Desert Zoo and Gardens, Palm Desert, California, USA.
Zoo Biol. 2022 Sep;41(5):479-490. doi: 10.1002/zoo.21705. Epub 2022 Jun 2.
In a conservation setting where escalating tension has been the norm, the unarmed primarily female-composed Black Mambas Anti-Poaching Unit (BMAPU) in South Africa are a successful counterpoint in that they have decimated poaching using only diplomacy and patrols. We sought to understand if the BMAPU is achieving its secondary goal of influencing support for conservation and wildlife among the nearby populace via community-based conservation actions including outreach and environmental education. We also determined the impact that the program has on the Mambas themselves. Using a mixed-methods survey we conducted structured in-person interviews with 120 community members from four communities where the women of the BMAPU live, and among all the women that were on active duty in the BMAPU at the time of the surveys. We found that all participants in the BMAPU program reported improved self and community perception of their societal role as financial providers, as well as their sense of agency and self-efficacy, relative to before becoming rangers. We also found that having BMAPU rangers living in the communities by itself did not contribute to community-level support for wildlife conservation or protected areas. However, one community with both a large-scale children's conservation education program and an equitable distribution of financial benefits paid by the nearby conservation concessionaires was significantly more supportive of wildlife conservation and protected areas than the other three. Further research to parse the relative contributions of the two contributing factors of education and financial benefit would help clarify their relative contributions. From this study, we conclude that a combination of child-focused conservation education programs and equitable distribution of financial benefits leads to increased community support for wildlife, conservation, and protected natural areas, and decreases support for poaching.
在一个紧张局势不断升级的保护环境背景下,南非的非武装、主要由女性组成的黑曼巴反偷猎组织(BMAPU)是一个成功的典范,因为它们仅通过外交和巡逻就成功打击了偷猎行为。我们试图了解 BMAPU 是否通过基于社区的保护行动,包括外展和环境教育,实现了其在附近民众中支持保护和野生动物的次要目标。我们还确定了该计划对曼巴蛇本身的影响。我们使用混合方法调查,对居住在 BMAPU 女性所在的四个社区的 120 名社区成员进行了结构化的面对面访谈,以及在调查时 BMAPU 中所有现役女性。我们发现,BMAPU 计划的所有参与者都报告说,与成为护林员之前相比,他们自己和社区对自己作为经济提供者的社会角色的看法有所改善,他们的机构感和自我效能感也有所提高。我们还发现,BMAPU 护林员居住在社区本身并没有促进社区层面的野生动物保护或保护区的支持。然而,一个社区既有大规模的儿童保护教育计划,又有附近保护特许权获得者公平分配的经济利益,该社区对野生动物保护和保护区的支持明显高于其他三个社区。进一步研究这两个促成因素——教育和经济利益的相对贡献,将有助于阐明它们的相对贡献。从这项研究中,我们得出的结论是,以儿童为重点的保护教育计划和公平分配经济利益相结合,会增加社区对野生动物、保护和自然保护区的支持,减少对偷猎的支持。