Wildlife snaring – an indicator of community response to a community-based conservation project
- 24 April 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Oryx
- Vol. 32 (02) , 111-121
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0030605300029859
Abstract
The use of wire snares for catching wildlife to support household needs was treated as an indicator to evaluate community support and understanding for a community-based resource management project. Data were based on snare counts in areas surrounding the targeted community as well as from interviews with individuals purported to have had a history of snaring. The high use of snares conflicted with expected behaviour for a community benefiting from the project. Snaring levels were high enough to threaten the viability of the safari industry and the derived revenues that were meant to be shared with the community. These contradictions suggested flaws in the project: an overdependence on external donor-supported management and lack of real community involvement and leadership in management of the resource. This study underscores the critical importance for monitoring land-use behaviour as an indicator of the success of community-based management projects.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Importance of GIS to Community‐Based Management of Wildlife: Lessons from ZambiaEcological Applications, 1995
- Transforming rural hunters into conservationists: An assessment of community-based wildlife management programs in AfricaWorld Development, 1995
- Ecological Monitoring: A Vital Need for Integrated Conservation and Development Programs in the TropicsConservation Biology, 1994
- Wildlife Conservation Outside Protected Areas—Lessons from an Experiment in ZambiaConservation Biology, 1990
- Allocation of resources for conservationNature, 1988