Mutinhima Yolanda, Sibanda Lovemore, Rono Betty J, Kulunge Salum, Kimaili David, Dickman Amy J, Madsen Emily, Mandoloma Lessah, Tacey Jessica, Allred Shorna, Hare Darragh
Department of Wildlife Ecology and Conservation, Chinhoyi University of Technology, Chinhoyi, Zimbabwe.
Centre for Sustainability Transitions, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa.
Biol Lett. 2025 Mar;21(3):20240571. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2024.0571. Epub 2025 Mar 19.
Two enduring ideological divisions in biodiversity conservation concern whether conservation should prioritize (i) the interests of people or wild animals and (ii) the interests of individual animals or groups of animals. Public debates suggest that people living in the Global North more strongly prioritize the interests of wild animals over people and the interests of individual animals over groups of animals. To examine this possibility, we measured and compared conservation priorities across 10 international publics living in rural and urban areas of sub-Saharan Africa, the United States of America (USA) and the United Kingdom (UK). Overall, distant respondents (i.e. living in the UK, USA and urban sub-Saharan Africa) more strongly prioritized the interests of wild animals over people and the interests of individual animals over groups of animals. Moreover, variation among local publics (i.e. living in high-biodiversity areas of rural sub-Saharan Africa) was greater than among distant publics. Our findings illuminate how ideological divisions may complicate international biodiversity conservation, especially around controversial topics such as culling, hunting, transloaction and protected-areas management. Policies and programmes more acceptable to distant people may be less acceptable to local people, creating difficulties for decision-makers charged with balancing biodiversity conservation alongside the values, needs, interests and concerns of multiple publics.
生物多样性保护中存在两种长期存在的意识形态分歧,涉及保护工作应优先考虑:(i)人类还是野生动物的利益,以及(ii)个体动物还是动物群体的利益。公开辩论表明,生活在全球北方的人们更强烈地将野生动物的利益置于人类之上,将个体动物的利益置于动物群体之上。为了检验这种可能性,我们衡量并比较了生活在撒哈拉以南非洲农村和城市地区、美国和英国的10个国际公众群体的保护优先级。总体而言,距离较远地区的受访者(即生活在英国、美国和撒哈拉以南非洲城市地区的人)更强烈地将野生动物的利益置于人类之上,将个体动物的利益置于动物群体之上。此外,当地公众群体(即生活在撒哈拉以南非洲农村高生物多样性地区的人)之间的差异大于距离较远地区的公众群体。我们的研究结果揭示了意识形态分歧可能如何使国际生物多样性保护复杂化,尤其是在诸如捕杀、狩猎、迁移和保护区管理等有争议的话题上。对距离较远地区的人们更可接受的政策和计划,对当地居民可能不那么可接受,这给负责在生物多样性保护与多个公众群体的价值观、需求、利益和关切之间取得平衡的决策者带来了困难。