The Impact of Human - Wildlife Conflicts

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Cambridge University Press

0521532035 - People and Wildlife: Conflict or Coexistence?


Edited by Rosie Woodroffe, Simon Thirgood and Alan Rabinowitz
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The impact of humanwildlife conflict


on natural systems
R O S I E W O O D R O F F E, S I M O N T H I R G O O D A N D
ALAN RABINOWITZ

INTRODUCTION

This book is concerned with resolving conflicts that occur between people
and threatened wildlife. Wildlife are often subject to control if they are
perceived to harm the livelihoods, lives or lifestyles of people. Many wildlife
species can thrive despite such control: our continued need for mouse- and
cockroach traps is testament to the resilience of some species in the face of
extensive lethal control. While a panoply of invertebrate (especially insect)
pests, and adaptable vertebrates such as coyotes (Canis latrans), ground
squirrels (e.g. Spermophilus californicus) and red-billed quelea (Quelea quelea)
continue to out-wit pest control experts, other species are not so well
equipped to resist the effects of lethal control, Many have become seriously
endangered as a result. This raises a serious challenge: what do we do when
a highly endangered animal genuinely causes serious damage to human
lives or livelihoods? How can we reconcile the need to conserve the species
with the need to protect the rights and property of people who share its
environment? Resolving such conflicts will be crucial to the success of
conservation development plans that require coexistence of people with
wildlife. For many sensitive species, effective conservation will be near-
impossible to achieve unless such conflicts can be resolved or at least
mitigated.

The scope and structure of this book


In this book, we seek resolutions to the most widespread and serious
conflicts involving people and threatened wildlife: crop raiding, livestock
depredation, predation on managed wildlife (such as farmed or otherwise
managed game species) and, least common but most emotive, killing of
people. We term this phenomenon humanwildlife conflict. These conflicts

People and Wildlife: Conflict or Coexistence? eds. Rosie Woodroffe, Simon Thirgood and Alan Rabinowitz.
Published by Cambridge University Press. # The Zoological Society of London 2005.

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0521532035 - People and Wildlife: Conflict or Coexistence?
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2 Rosie Woodroffe, Simon Thirgood and Alan Rabinowitz

involve a taxonomically diverse array of wild species, but many of the


solutions may be generally applicable. To preserve this generality, we have
omitted some less common forms of conflict, such as control of wildlife to
limit the spread of infectious disease. We have focussed on the best-studied
systems, which leads to an inevitable bias towards studies of large verte-
brates. Nevertheless, this is not a book about vertebrate pest management. An
extensive literature on vertebrate pest management has developed over the
past 30 years, particularly in the USA, which has recently been summarized
by Conover (2002). Our book differs in that we seek solutions that will result
in an improvement of the conservation status of wildlife that come into
conflict with people. Our perspective is the management of species
of conservation concern, and we consider the management of common,
successful species only insofar as this contains lessons for more threatened
species. However, we are aware that some of the approaches that we discuss
may have local application to the management of common species. We
have also chosen to focus entirely on terrestrial ecosystems. Conflicts
between people and wildlife do exist in the marine and freshwater
environments, such as the debate over the role of marine mammals in
preventing the recovery of commercial fisheries (Yodsis 2001), but the
solutions to such issues are likely to be very different from those in terres-
trial systems.
This book falls into three parts. The first section (Chapters 1 and 2) sets
the scene by reviewing the impact of lethal control on wild populations of
threatened species (this chapter), and the impacts of threatened species on
human lives and livelihoods (Thirgood et al., Chapter 2). Our second section
(Chapters 3 to 10) reviews various approaches to resolving conflicts between
people and wildlife, including technical measures to mitigate wildlife
impacts (e.g. guard dogs, electric fencing: Breitenmoser et al., Chapter 4),
economic incentives that may offset the costs of wildlife impacts
(e.g. ecotourism: Walpole and Thouless, Chapter 8) and policy approaches
(e.g. zoning: Linnell et al., Chapter 10). The third section (Chapters 11 to 23)
presents a broad array of case studies which discuss specific attempts
to resolve conflicts between people and threatened wildlife. Finally we
present (in Chapter 24) our conclusions and our hopes for the future.

LETHAL CONTROL

Where wildlife cause or are perceived to cause serious damage to human


livelihoods, a common response has been to kill them. We choose to term
this practice lethal control because an alternative word, persecution,
implies that such control is unjust or unwarranted. To the contrary, wild

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0521532035 - People and Wildlife: Conflict or Coexistence?
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The impact of humanwildlife conflict on natural systems 3

animals even beautiful, charismatic and highly endangered wild animals


can and do kill people, destroy their crops and kill their livestock (Thirgood
et al., Chapter 2). If we fail to appreciate this crucial fact, we can never fully
understand the causes of conflicts, and will never successfully resolve them.
People have been subjecting wildlife to lethal control for centuries if not
millenia. As early as AD 800, the Emperor Charlemagne employed a cadre
of professional wolf-hunters tasked with ridding the Holy Roman Empire of
this menace (Boitani 1995). Some societies have taboos against killing
particular species, even if they cause serious damage (e.g. Menon et al.
1998), but this is rare. Cultural factors strongly influence peoples will-
ingness to tolerate wildlife damage (Woodroffe 2000), but in many cases
a primary limitation on the level of lethal control has been peoples ability to
capture and kill wildlife. Deliberate killing of wild animals perceived as pests
has taken place on all of the inhabited continents, as well as in the sea and
fresh water, and involves threatened species as diverse as orang utans (Pongo
pygmaeus: Rijksen and Meijaard 1999), snow leopards (Uncia uncia: Ahmad
1994), peregrine falcons (Falco peregrinus: Thirgood et al. 2000b), prairie
dogs (Cynomys spp.: Miller et al. 1996) and fur seals (Wickens 1996).
Wildlife perceived as problem animals are killed both legally and
illegally, by private individuals, informally organized communities, bounty
hunters, and local and national governments. In developed countries the
most common methods are shooting, trapping and poisoning, but trad-
itional methods are also used. For example, in East Africa large carnivores
are not infrequently killed with spears (Frank et al., Chapter 18), as are
African elephants (Loxodonta africana), and chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes:
Ghiglieri 1984; Moss 2001). Innovative (if sometimes grisly) new methods
have also been devised. In India, for example, farmers may deliberately
modify power lines to electrocute crop-raiding Asian elephants (Elephas
maximus), or pack explosives into jackfruit baits (Menon et al. 1998).
Novel methods may also be highly selective; for example protective collars
fitted to livestock ensure that coyotes are killed only when they bite the
throat of a sheep and pierce the collars reservoirs of 1080 poison (Burns
et al. 1996).

HISTORICAL IMPACTS OF LETHAL CONTROL

Species extinctions
Lethal control has led to the extinctions of several species. The Guadelupe
caracara (Polyborus lutosus), a raptor species confined to the island of
Guadelupe off the Pacific coast of Mexico, was reported to kill juvenile
goats and was shot and poisoned by local people for this reason

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4 Rosie Woodroffe, Simon Thirgood and Alan Rabinowitz

(Greenaway 1967). While the last few individuals were killed by collectors,
lethal control is believed to have been the principal factor leading to the
species extinction in 1900 (Fuller 2000). Likewise, conflict with people
over sheep depredation led to the extinction of two carnivorous mammals,
the thylacine or marsupial wolf (Thylacinus cynocephalus., in 1930), restricted
to Tasmania, and the Falkland Island wolf (Dusicyon australis, in 1876:
IUCN 2002). The Carolina parakeet (Conuropsis carolinensis) was killed as
a pest of fruit crops, and this is believed to have been a primary cause of the
species extinction in 1904 (IUCN 2002). Reports from the time describe
how, once one parakeet was shot, others would hover and scream above the
carcass, making it easy to destroy entire flocks (Greenaway 1967).

Range collapses
Only a handful of species have been completely extirpated through human
persecution, but many species have experienced massive contractions of
their geographic ranges. Some of the most impressive range collapses
occurred in North America, perhaps because the pioneer spirit of
European settlers pitted well-armed and highly motivated people against
wildlife with very little experience of lethal control. In 1900, colonies of
prairie dogs not, in fact, dogs but burrowing squirrels are estimated to
have covered 410 000 km2 of North Americas short grass prairies. However,
the farming industry perceived them as vermin which could compete with
livestock for forage, and they were subjected to a massive government-
sponsored poisoning campaign. By 1960, prairie dogs geographic range
had collapsed to less than 2% of their former distribution, and this range
was still further reduced by the end of the twentieth century (Reading et al.,
Chapter 13). Likewise, wolves (Canis lupus and C. rufus) were formerly dis-
tributed throughout the USA south of Canada, but, following a concerted
(and, once again, government-sponsored) attempt to eradicate a species
perceived as a threat to livestock, by 1960 they were confined to northeastern
Minnesota and Isle Royale National Park in Lake Superior (C. lupus) and to a
small area on the TexasLouisiana border (C. rufus). Hence, wolves were
extirpated from nearly 8 000 000 km2 of their former range in North
America alone (Fig. 1.1a). African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus) were eradicated
from 25 of the 39 countries they formerly occupied (Fig. 1.1b), not only
because they were considered a threat to livestock but also because they
were thought to suppress densities of game species inside protected areas
(Bere 1955). Similar range collapses have affected most of the larger mammal-
ian carnivores and are almost too numerous to mention. Both lions (Panthera
leo) and cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) were all but eradicated from Asia by the
early twentieth century, and today occupy greatly reduced distributions in

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(a)

(b)

Figure 1.1. Range collapses of wildlife species in conflict with people. Maps
compare historic distributions with more recent distributions. (a) Grey wolves in
North America: 1700 (light grey) vs. 1970 (dark grey), based on data from Thiel and
Ream (1992); (b) African wild dogs: 1800 (light grey) vs. 1997 (dark grey), based
on data from Fanshawe et al. (1997); (c) hen harriers in Britain (18251975; (for
colours see key), based on data from Watson (1977).

Africa (Nowell and Jackson 1996). Brown bears (Ursus arctos), lynx (Lynx lynx)
and wolves had disappeared from most of western Europe by the end of the
nineteenth century (Woodroffe 2001a). Jaguars (Panthera onca) have shown a
similar range contraction in Central and South America (Sanderson et al.
2002), as have dingoes (Canis familiaris dingo) in Australia (Glen and
Short 2000).

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(c)

1825
1900
1975

Figure 1.1. (cont.)

Avian predators have shown similar patterns of range collapse. Birds of


prey come into conflict with hunters and farmers because of their predation
on livestock and on game species, and lethal control has had a major impact
on the status and distribution of numerous species throughout the world
(Newton 1979, 1998; Manosa 2002; Vinuela and Arroyo 2002). This has
been particularly well documented in Scotland where conflicts have been
intense, and where there is a strong tradition of ornithology to assess the
impacts of sustained killing of raptors (Galbraith et al. 2003). A good
example is the hen harrier (Circus cyaneus) which comes into conflict with
grouse (Lagopus lagopus) hunters and landowners because of the impact of
its predation on grouse harvests (Thirgood et al. 2000a, b, c; Thirgood and
Redpath, Chapter 12). Hen harriers were historically widespread in
Scotland, but sustained killing during the nineteenth century eradicated
them from the mainland leaving a few remnant populations in the Western
Isles (Watson 1977) (Fig. 1.1c). Harriers recolonized the mainland during
the 1940s, but have not reoccupied their original geographic range.
Similar patterns of range collapse have been recorded for Scottish popu-
lations of golden eagles (Aquila chrysaetos) and white-tailed eagles
(Haliaeetus albicilla), although in these cases conflicts were perceived to be
with sheep-farmers as much as grouse-hunters (Watson 1977). Range con-
tractions have also occurred in other European countries where game-bird
shooting is a significant form of land use. Of particular concern is the
situation in Spain, where deliberate killing of raptors involves extremely

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endangered species such as Bonellis eagles (Hieraetus fasciatus) and


Spanish Imperial eagles (Aquila adalberti: Vinuela and Villafuerte 2003).

CURRENT POPULATION IMPACTS OF LETHAL CONTROL

Large-scale population suppression


Where lethal control has not caused local extinction, it may still cause local
declines or suppress populations. Multiple studies have shown that carni-
vore populations are limited by human interventions. For example, wolves
living in human-dominated landscapes are almost invariably limited by
people. Where wolf-hunting is legal, this accounts for much of the offtake,
but human activities can still limit local populations even where wolves are
legally protected (Boitani 1992; Fuller 1989; Bangs et al., Chapter 21).
Likewise, lion, red fox (Vulpes vulpes), dingo and European badger (Meles
meles) populations may be suppressed below carrying capacity by control
efforts ( Allen and Gonzalez 1998; Heydon and Reynolds 2000; Le Fevre
et al. 2003, Frank et al., Chapter 18).
Estimates of the impacts of lethal control on elephant populations are
few in number. In southern India, 17% of female elephant mortality was due
to either shooting or electrocution carried out by people in defence of their
crops (Sukumar 1989). While demographic modelling suggested that this
level of control was just sustainable, small increases in mortality were
projected to cause declines. Among males (which have tusks), retributive
killing (817% of deaths) was apparently dwarfed by poaching (4857%)
as a cause of mortality; this combined offtake caused marked decline of
the male population (Sukumar 1989). Unconfirmed reports suggest even
more severe impacts of lethal control on Asian elephants in Sri Lanka
(Sri Lanka Wildlife Conservation Society 2000).
As in Asia, estimating the impact of retributive killing on African
elephant populations is difficult, in part because studying elephant demo-
graphy requires expensive long-term studies, and in part because data are
complicated by the issue of ivory poaching. However, the available data
indicate that problem animal control is an important cause of mortality.
Information presented to the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species (CITES) in 1997 suggests that problem animal control
may be as serious a mortality cause as ivory poaching. Of 1224 elephant
deaths recorded in Botswana in 198996, 230 were due to problem animal
control and 259 were poached (CITES 1997). Likewise, in Kenya 467
elephants were recorded killed in problem animal control during 19938,
compared with 355 poached (R. Hoare pers. comm.). Figures for Namibia
suggest a somewhat smaller impact of retributive killing, with 148 poached

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during 19906 and 2950 killed as problem animals (CITES 1997). While
these data do not provide quantitative estimates of the impact of retributive
killing on local elephant populations, they do suggest that if the current level
of ivory poaching is a threat to Africa elephants, problem animal control is
an equally serious threat (see also Western and Waithaka, Chapter 22).
Killing of crop-raiding elephants is a widespread phenomenon in Africa
(e.g. Dudley et al. 1992; Tchamba 1996), but its impact on regional elephant
populations appears largely unknown.
Almost no quantitative data are available on the impact of retributive
killing on crop-raiding primates, in part because few population studies
have been carried out where primates are in direct conflict with people.

Local effects: sourcesink dynamics


Because populations are connected with one another through animal move-
ment, even localized lethal control can influence populations over wide
areas. Frank et al. (Chapter 18) show how lethal control of livestock-killing
lions on a single 180-km2 ranch generated a sink affecting the lion popula-
tion over at least 2000 km2. Mace and Waller (1998) described a similar
impact of localized mortality on a regional grizzly bear (Ursus arctos) popula-
tion. On a still larger scale, Etheridge et al. (1997; see also Thirgood and
Redpath, Chapter 12) showed that illegal killing of hen harriers on moorland
managed for commercial hunting of red grouse transformed an entire
habitat type into an extensive population sink, sustained only by immigra-
tion from moorland not managed in this way. Of course, the more widely
individuals of a species range (or disperse), the greater the spatial scale
across which sourcesink effects may operate.
Sourcesink dynamics can have especially damaging effects when they
involve nominally protected populations. Where people use lands adjacent
to reserves, their activities can threaten wildlife nominally protected by the
park. One of the best examples of such edge effects comes from Algonquin
Park, Canada, where the wolf population was driven into decline by persist-
ent killing of animals that ranged beyond park boundaries (Forbes and
Theberge 1996). Banning the killing of wolves close to the park border
dramatically reduced overall mortality in the park (Forbes and Theberge
1996). Likewise, most of the African elephant mortality recorded in a
population under study in Amboseli National Park, Kenya, was due to
spearing by neighbouring cattle-farmers (Moss 2001). Edge-related mortal-
ity of this kind is extremely common among large carnivores, occurring in
all species for which data are available (Woodroffe and Ginsberg 1998,
2000). Mortality is particularly severe where reserves are surrounded by
high densities of people (Harcourt et al. 2001).

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Such localized edge mortality need not necessarily contribute to overall


population decline. For example, the Amboseli elephant population was
increasing at 2.2% per year despite regular offtake due to conflict with
neighbouring cattle-farmers. However, if edge mortality is high enough, it
can cause population decline or even local extinction. Woodroffe and
Ginsberg (1998) showed that these effects are a globally important cause
of extinction among nominally protected carnivore populations. Wide-
ranging species such as grizzly bears and African wild dogs are particularly
sensitive to extinction through these effects, and persist only in the very
largest national parks and reserves. This is almost certainly because they are
especially likely to wander over the borders of protected areas and into
contact with people.

Indirect effects
Even where lethal control has relatively small direct impacts on population
density, there is a possibility that its effects might be magnified by social
factors. For example, killing of seven male chimpanzees (from a community
of about 80) in a crop-raiding incident profoundly affected the social structure
of a group under study in the Ta Forest, Cote DIvoire (Boesch and Boesch-
Achermann 2000). This social disruption was believed to have reduced the
groups ability to counter leopard attacks, which subsequently led to high
mortality. Likewise, Courchamp and Macdonald (2001) argued that quite
small reductions in pack size of African wild dogs (as might occur through
lethal control) could dramatically affect the groups ability to hunt and raise
young, thus having disproportionately large impacts on population density.

Behavioural responses to lethal control


Lethal control has very clear population impacts, but it may also have
indirect effects through its impact on behaviour. Local extinction may
occur because all the animals in an area are killed, but it can also occur
because all the animals move elsewhere. Collapse of African elephant
populations in areas of high human density (Hoare and Du Toit 1999)
probably occurs through such behaviour. Elephants will move away from
areas where conspecifics are killed (Whyte 1993), and this may disrupt
natural seasonal migrations (Tchamba et al. 1995), with unknown conse-
quences for population viability. One result of such movements is that
elephants may become compressed in relatively small protected areas (e.g.
Wittemyer 2001), a situation that is probably not sustainable in the long
term. Fortunately, savanna elephants also become aware quite rapidly when
formerly dangerous areas become safe, and will recolonize areas surpris-
ingly readily if habitat connectivity has been preserved (e.g. Thouless 1995).

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Animals ability to recognize areas that are dangerous may, of course,


greatly reduce human impact on their populations. Frank et al. (Chapter 18)
suggest that lions may avoid areas where they face high mortality risks. This
behavioural response may help to explain why lions have historically been
highly extinction-prone outside protected areas, yet persist well, and at high
densities, in quite small reserves (Woodroffe 2001a).

I M P A C T S O F H U M A N--W I L D L I F E C O N F L I C T O N
ECOSYSTEM FUNCTION AND HABITAT DESTRUCTION

Trophic cascades
The outcome of conflicts between people and wildlife may extend beyond
populations, to affect entire ecosystems. Many conflict species (e.g. ele-
phants, large carnivores) are also keystone species whose removal affects the
structure of entire ecosystems. Extirpation of grey wolves and grizzly bears
from parts of the northern Rocky Mountains has been shown to influence,
through its impacts on ungulate density and behaviour, habitat suitability for
neotropical migrant birds (Berger et al. 2001), and restoration of grey wolves
has affected many facets oft his montane ecosystem (Smith et al. 2003).
Perhaps the best example of a trophic cascade triggered by humanwildlife
conflict involves prairie dogs. Prairie dog colonies constitute a unique grass-
land habitat which support a remarkably biodiverse community (Kotliar et al.
in press). Systematic attempts to eradicate prairie dogs from very large areas
will have adversely affected all members of this community, but its most
high-profile (and expensive) impact was the extinction in the wild of the
black-footed ferret (Mustela nigripes), a highly specialized species that is an
obligate predator of prairie dogs (Miller et al. 1996). Black-footed ferrets in the
last wild population to go extinct (prior to intensive recovery efforts and
multiple reintroductions) were very few in number and ultimately killed by
infectious disease; hence initial recovery issues focussed primarily on these
issues (Seal et al. 1989). However, it was deliberate destruction of the ferrets
habitat and prey base that drove their decline, and which continues to dog
recovery efforts (Miller et al. 1996).
Sea otters (Enhydra lutris) are another strongly interacting species
affected by humanwildlife conflict. For many years, conflict with lucrative
shellfish fisheries on parts of the California coast prompted local laws to
prevent sea otter recovery in designated no otter zones (US Fish and
Wildlife Service 2003c). Sea otters role in structuring marine communities
is very well established (Estes et al. 1996); hence this management decision
could have had a very marked effect on many aspects of Californias coastal
ecosystems, beyond its influence on fisheries.

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