Abstract

Incorporating local perspectives is fundamental to evidence-based conservation, for both understanding complex socio-ecological systems and implementing appropriate management interventions. How local communities understand extinction, and whether these views affect perceptions of biodiversity loss and the effect of anthropogenic activities, has rarely been evaluated explicitly in conservation projects. To target this data gap, we conducted 185 interviews to assess levels and patterns of understanding about wildlife decline and extinction in rural communities around Bawangling National Nature Reserve, Hainan, China, a priority conservation site that has experienced recent species losses. Interviewees showed varying awareness of declines and extirpation of local wildlife species. Two-thirds did not consider the permanent disappearance of wildlife to be possible; among those who did, only one-third could comprehend the scientific term “extinction.” Thinking extinction is possible was associated with identifying declined and extirpated species, but not with perceiving locally-driven human activities, such as hunting, as the reason for wildlife loss. The government was seen as the entity most responsible for conservation. Variation found around local perceptions of extinction, its drivers, and conservation responsibility demonstrates that comprehension of key conservation concepts should not be assumed to be homogenous, highlighting the challenge of transposing scientific concepts between different social and cultural settings. Proactively incorporating local perspectives and worldviews, especially by obtaining context-specific baseline understandings, has major implications for other contexts worldwide and should inform conservation planning and management.

Highlights

  • A key objective of conservation science is to understand the patterns and drivers of species declines and extinction to reduce the loss of biodiversity (Soulé, 2013)

  • In order to target these key data gaps in our understanding of extinction awareness, we investigated the following questions in village communities surrounding Bawangling National Nature Reserve (BNNR) in Hainan Province, China: (a) whether and how local people understand species decline and extinction, and their respective drivers; (b) what demographic variables covary with these perceptions; (c) whether people who think extinction is possible have favorable attitudes toward hunting, firewood collection, and use of natural resources; and (d) who local people think should be responsible for conservation, and what factors influence whether they identify different bodies as being responsible

  • In order to develop appropriate methods to mitigate unsustainable interactions between local communities and threatened biodiversity, it should neither be assumed that all cultures share the western scientific understanding of extinction, nor that people not exposed to western scientific thinking cannot comprehend extinction (Casanova et al, 2014; Forth, 2016; Wehi et al, 2018)

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Summary

Introduction

A key objective of conservation science is to understand the patterns and drivers of species declines and extinction to reduce the loss of biodiversity (Soulé, 2013). To understand extinction patterns and processes, researchers and practitioners can benefit from proactive engagement with the perceptions, knowledge, and experiences of people in these communities (Bennett, 2016; Pyhälä et al, 2016). In many cases, such communities are the focus for conservation interventions aimed at altering awareness and behaviors (Nilsson et al, 2016), but doing so effectively requires baseline understandings of local perceptions

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