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Spatio-temporal patterns of attacks on human and economic losses from wildlife in Chitwan National Park, Nepal

Wildlife attacks on humans and economic losses often result in reduced support of local communities for wildlife conservation. Information on spatial and temporal patterns of such losses in the highly affected areas contribute in designing and implementing effective mitigation measures. We analyzed...

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Autores principales: Lamichhane, Babu Ram, Persoon, Gerard A., Leirs, Herwig, Poudel, Shashank, Subedi, Naresh, Pokheral, Chiranjibi Prasad, Bhattarai, Santosh, Thapaliya, Bishnu Prasad, de Iongh, Hans H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5908188/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29672538
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195373
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author Lamichhane, Babu Ram
Persoon, Gerard A.
Leirs, Herwig
Poudel, Shashank
Subedi, Naresh
Pokheral, Chiranjibi Prasad
Bhattarai, Santosh
Thapaliya, Bishnu Prasad
de Iongh, Hans H.
author_facet Lamichhane, Babu Ram
Persoon, Gerard A.
Leirs, Herwig
Poudel, Shashank
Subedi, Naresh
Pokheral, Chiranjibi Prasad
Bhattarai, Santosh
Thapaliya, Bishnu Prasad
de Iongh, Hans H.
author_sort Lamichhane, Babu Ram
collection PubMed
description Wildlife attacks on humans and economic losses often result in reduced support of local communities for wildlife conservation. Information on spatial and temporal patterns of such losses in the highly affected areas contribute in designing and implementing effective mitigation measures. We analyzed the loss of humans, livestock and property caused by wildlife during 1998 to 2016, using victim family’s reports to Chitwan National Park authorities and Buffer Zone User Committees. A total of 4,014 incidents were recorded including attacks on humans, livestock depredation, property damage and crop raiding caused by 12 wildlife species. In total >400,000 US dollar was paid to the victim families as a relief over the whole period. Most of the attacks on humans were caused by rhino, sloth bear, tiger, elephant, wild boar and leopard. A significantly higher number of conflict incidents caused by rhino and elephant were observed during full moon periods. An increase in the wildlife population did not coincide with an equal rise in conflict incidents reported. Underprivileged ethnic communities were attacked by wildlife more frequently than expected. Number of attacks on humans by carnivores and herbivores did not differ significantly. An insignificant decreasing trend of wildlife attacks on humans and livestock was observed with significant variation over the years. Tiger and leopard caused >90% of livestock depredation. Tigers killed both large (cattle and buffalo) and medium sized (goat, sheep, pig) livestock but leopard mostly killed medium sized livestock. Most (87%) of the livestock killing during 2012–2016 occurred within the stall but close (<500m) to the forest edge. Both the percentage of households with livestock and average holding has decreased over the years in buffer zone. Decreased forest dependency as well as conflict mitigation measures (electric and mesh wire fences) have contributed to keep the conflict incidents in control. Strengthening mitigation measures like construction of electric or mesh wire fences and predator-proof livestock corrals along with educating local communities about wildlife behavior and timely management of problem animals (man-eater tiger, rage elephant etc.) will contribute to reduce the conflict.
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spelling pubmed-59081882018-05-04 Spatio-temporal patterns of attacks on human and economic losses from wildlife in Chitwan National Park, Nepal Lamichhane, Babu Ram Persoon, Gerard A. Leirs, Herwig Poudel, Shashank Subedi, Naresh Pokheral, Chiranjibi Prasad Bhattarai, Santosh Thapaliya, Bishnu Prasad de Iongh, Hans H. PLoS One Research Article Wildlife attacks on humans and economic losses often result in reduced support of local communities for wildlife conservation. Information on spatial and temporal patterns of such losses in the highly affected areas contribute in designing and implementing effective mitigation measures. We analyzed the loss of humans, livestock and property caused by wildlife during 1998 to 2016, using victim family’s reports to Chitwan National Park authorities and Buffer Zone User Committees. A total of 4,014 incidents were recorded including attacks on humans, livestock depredation, property damage and crop raiding caused by 12 wildlife species. In total >400,000 US dollar was paid to the victim families as a relief over the whole period. Most of the attacks on humans were caused by rhino, sloth bear, tiger, elephant, wild boar and leopard. A significantly higher number of conflict incidents caused by rhino and elephant were observed during full moon periods. An increase in the wildlife population did not coincide with an equal rise in conflict incidents reported. Underprivileged ethnic communities were attacked by wildlife more frequently than expected. Number of attacks on humans by carnivores and herbivores did not differ significantly. An insignificant decreasing trend of wildlife attacks on humans and livestock was observed with significant variation over the years. Tiger and leopard caused >90% of livestock depredation. Tigers killed both large (cattle and buffalo) and medium sized (goat, sheep, pig) livestock but leopard mostly killed medium sized livestock. Most (87%) of the livestock killing during 2012–2016 occurred within the stall but close (<500m) to the forest edge. Both the percentage of households with livestock and average holding has decreased over the years in buffer zone. Decreased forest dependency as well as conflict mitigation measures (electric and mesh wire fences) have contributed to keep the conflict incidents in control. Strengthening mitigation measures like construction of electric or mesh wire fences and predator-proof livestock corrals along with educating local communities about wildlife behavior and timely management of problem animals (man-eater tiger, rage elephant etc.) will contribute to reduce the conflict. Public Library of Science 2018-04-19 /pmc/articles/PMC5908188/ /pubmed/29672538 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195373 Text en © 2018 Lamichhane et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lamichhane, Babu Ram
Persoon, Gerard A.
Leirs, Herwig
Poudel, Shashank
Subedi, Naresh
Pokheral, Chiranjibi Prasad
Bhattarai, Santosh
Thapaliya, Bishnu Prasad
de Iongh, Hans H.
Spatio-temporal patterns of attacks on human and economic losses from wildlife in Chitwan National Park, Nepal
title Spatio-temporal patterns of attacks on human and economic losses from wildlife in Chitwan National Park, Nepal
title_full Spatio-temporal patterns of attacks on human and economic losses from wildlife in Chitwan National Park, Nepal
title_fullStr Spatio-temporal patterns of attacks on human and economic losses from wildlife in Chitwan National Park, Nepal
title_full_unstemmed Spatio-temporal patterns of attacks on human and economic losses from wildlife in Chitwan National Park, Nepal
title_short Spatio-temporal patterns of attacks on human and economic losses from wildlife in Chitwan National Park, Nepal
title_sort spatio-temporal patterns of attacks on human and economic losses from wildlife in chitwan national park, nepal
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5908188/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29672538
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195373
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