Abstract

Overexploitation is a critical threat to the survival of many species. The global demand for wildlife products has attracted considerable research attention, but regional species exploitation histories are more rarely investigated. We interviewed 169 villagers living around seven terrestrial nature reserves on Hainan Island, China, with the aim of reconstructing historical patterns of hunting and consumption of local wildlife, including the globally threatened Chinese pangolin (Manis pentadactyla) and Hainan peacock-pheasant (Polyplectron katsumatae), from the mid-20th century onwards. We aimed to better understand the relationship between these past activities and current consumption patterns. Our findings suggest that eating pangolin meat was not a traditional behaviour in Hainan, with past consumption prohibited by local myths about pangolins. In contrast, local consumption of peacock-pheasant meat was a traditional activity. However, later attitudes around hunting pangolins and peacock-pheasants in Hainan were influenced by pro-hunting policies and a state-run wildlife trade from the 1960s to the 1980s. These new social norms still shape the daily lifestyles and perceptions of local people towards wildlife consumption in Hainan today. Due to these specific historical patterns of wildlife consumption, local-adapted interventions such as promoting substitute meat choices and alternative livelihoods might be effective at tackling local habits of consuming wild meat. Our study highlights the importance of understanding the local historical contexts of wildlife use for designing appropriate conservation strategies.

Highlights

  • Unsustainable harvesting of wildlife, in particular hunting for meat consumption, has been recognised as one of the major causes of global biodiversity loss (Bennett and Robinson, 2000; Corlett, 2007; Benítez-López et al, 2017; Grooten and Almond, 2018)

  • Many hunting-induced population declines and regional extinctions have been documented in China across a diverse range of species (Greer and Doughty, 1976; Thapar, 1996; Rookmaaker, 2006; Turvey et al, 2015a), and further population collapses of formerly widespread and abundant species, such as the Chinese giant salamander (Andrias davidianus) and yellowbreasted bunting (Emberiza aureola), continue to occur due to extensive and unsustainable demand for the wild meat market (Wang et al, 2004; Kamp et al, 2015; Cunningham et al, 2016)

  • Our results provide a new baseline to understand patterns, levels, and socio-cultural drivers of local hunting of pangolins and other conservation-priority species in Hainan Island, China

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Summary

Introduction

Unsustainable harvesting of wildlife, in particular hunting for meat consumption, has been recognised as one of the major causes of global biodiversity loss (Bennett and Robinson, 2000; Corlett, 2007; Benítez-López et al, 2017; Grooten and Almond, 2018). Many hunting-induced population declines and regional extinctions have been documented in China across a diverse range of species (Greer and Doughty, 1976; Thapar, 1996; Rookmaaker, 2006; Turvey et al, 2015a), and further population collapses of formerly widespread and abundant species, such as the Chinese giant salamander (Andrias davidianus) and yellowbreasted bunting (Emberiza aureola), continue to occur due to extensive and unsustainable demand for the wild meat market (Wang et al, 2004; Kamp et al, 2015; Cunningham et al, 2016). Historical patterns of wildlife consumption, and the extent to which such patterns might have become modified during recent periods of socio-cultural change, are important to understand when designing conservation management strategies for species threatened by overexploitation (Huber, 2012; Duffy et al, 2016)

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