Impacts of a trophy hunting ban on private land conservation in South African biodiversity hotspots

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Parker , K , De Vos , A , Clements , H S , Biggs , D & Biggs , R 2020 , ' Impacts of a trophy hunting ban on private land conservation in South African biodiversity hotspots ' , Conservation Science and Practice , vol. 2 , no. 7 , 214 . https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.214

Title: Impacts of a trophy hunting ban on private land conservation in South African biodiversity hotspots
Author: Parker, Kim; De Vos, Alta; Clements, Hayley S.; Biggs, Duan; Biggs, Reinette
Contributor organization: Department of Geosciences and Geography
Date: 2020-07
Language: eng
Number of pages: 12
Belongs to series: Conservation Science and Practice
ISSN: 2578-4854
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.214
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/340654
Abstract: Private land conservation areas (PLCAs) have become critical for achieving global conservation goals, but we lack understanding of how and when these areas respond to global pressures and opportunities. In southern Africa, where many PLCAs rely on trophy hunting as an income-generating strategy, a potential ban on trophy hunting locally or abroad holds unknown consequences for the future conservation of these lands. In this study, we investigate the consequences of a potential trophy hunting ban in PLCAs in two biodiversity hotspots in South Africa's Eastern and Western Cape provinces. We used semistructured interviews with PLCA managers and owners to elicit perceived impacts of an internationally imposed trophy hunting ban on conservation activities in PLCAs, and to probe alternative viable land uses. The majority of interviewees believed that both the economic viability of their PLCA and biodiversity would be lost following a hunting ban. Owners would primarily consider transitioning to ecotourism or livestock farming, but these options were constrained by the social-ecological context of their PLCA (e.g., competition with other PLCAs, ecological viability of farming). Our results suggest that a trophy hunting ban may have many unintended consequences for biodiversity conservation, national economies, and the livelihoods of PLCA owners and employees. Along with similar social-ecological studies in other areas and contexts, our work can inform policy decisions around global trophy hunting regulation.
Subject: 1171 Geosciences
biodiversity conservation
land use change
other effective area-based conservation measures
protected areas
resilience
social-ecological systems
PROTECTED AREAS
ECOTOURISM
RESILIENCE
WILDLIFE
TOURISM
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: cc_by
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: publishedVersion


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