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Warfare and wildlife declines in Africa's protected areas

机译:非洲保护区的战争和野生动植物数量减少

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摘要

Large-mammal populations are ecological linchpins(1), and their worldwide decline(2) and extinction(3) disrupts many ecosystem functions and services(4). Reversal of this trend will require an understanding of the determinants of population decline, to enable more accurate predictions of when and where collapses will occur and to guide the development of effective conservation and restoration policies(2,5). Many correlates of large-mammal declines are known, including low reproductive rates, overhunting, and habitat destruction(2,6,7). However, persistent uncertainty about the effects of one widespread factor-armed conflict-complicates conservation-planning and priority-setting efforts(5,8). Case studies have revealed that conflict can have either positive or negative local impacts on wildlife(8-10), but the direction and magnitude of its net effect over large spatiotemporal scales have not previously been quantified(5). Here we show that conflict frequency predicts the occurrence and severity of population declines among wild large herbivores in African protected areas from 1946 to 2010. Conflict was extensive during this period, occurring in 71% of protected areas, and conflict frequency was the single most important predictor of wildlife population trends among the variables that we analysed. Population trajectories were stable in peacetime, fell significantly below replacement with only slight increases in conflict frequency (one conflict-year per two-to-five decades), and were almost invariably negative in high-conflict sites, both in the full 65-year dataset and in an analysis restricted to recent decades (1989-2010). Yet total population collapse was infrequent, indicating that war-torn faunas can often recover. Human population density was also correlated (positively) with wildlife population trajectories in recent years; however, we found no significant effect, in either timespan, of species body mass, protected-area size, conflict intensity (human fatalities), drought frequency, presence of extractable mineral resources, or various metrics of development and governance. Our results suggest that sustained conservation activity in conflict zones-and rapid interventions following ceasefires-may help to save many at-risk populations and species.
机译:大哺乳动物是生态的关键(1),其全球范围的衰退(2)和灭绝(3)破坏了许多生态系统的功能和服务(4)。要扭转这一趋势,就需要了解人口下降的决定因素,以便能够更准确地预测何时何地发生崩溃,并指导制定有效的保护和恢复政策(2,5)。已知大型哺乳动物数量下降的许多相关因素,包括低繁殖率,过度捕猎和栖息地破坏(2,6,7)。但是,关于一场广泛的武装冲突的影响的持续不确定性使保护计划和确定优先重点的工作变得复杂(5,8)。案例研究表明,冲突可能对野生动植物造成正面或负面的局部影响(8-10),但先前尚未量化其在大时空尺度上的净效应的方向和程度(5)。在这里,我们显示冲突频率可预测1946年至2010年非洲保护区野生大型草食动物种群的发生和严重程度。在此期间,冲突广泛,发生在71%的保护区中,冲突频率是最重要的一个我们分析的变量中,野生动植物种群趋势的预测指标。和平时期的人口轨迹稳定,大大低于替代人口,冲突频率仅略有增加(每二至五十年一个冲突年),而在高冲突地区,整个65年几乎都是负面的数据集,并且分析仅限于最近十年(1989-2010)。但是总人口很少发生崩溃,这表明饱受战争摧残的动物通常可以恢复。近年来,人口密度也与野生动植物的种群轨迹相关(呈正相关)。但是,我们发现,在任何时间范围内,物种体重,保护区面积,冲突强度(人类死亡人数),干旱频率,可开采矿产资源的存在或各种发展与治理指标均无显着影响。我们的结果表明,冲突地区的持续保护活动以及停火后的快速干预可能有助于拯救许多处于危险中的种群和物种。

著录项

  • 来源
    《Nature》 |2018年第7688期|328-332|共5页
  • 作者单位

    Princeton Univ, Dept Ecol & Evolut Biol, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA|Yale Univ, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, New Haven, CT 06520 USA|Yale Univ, Yale Inst Biospher Studies, New Haven, CT 06520 USA;

    Princeton Univ, Dept Ecol & Evolut Biol, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA;

  • 收录信息 美国《科学引文索引》(SCI);美国《工程索引》(EI);美国《生物学医学文摘》(MEDLINE);美国《化学文摘》(CA);
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
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