Abstract

Wildlife is often blamed for causing damage to human activities, including agricultural practices and the result may be a conflict between human interests and species conservation. A formal assessment of the magnitude of damage is necessary to adequately conduct management practices and an assessment of the efficiency of different management practices is necessary to enable managers to mitigate the conflict with rural people. This study was carried out to evaluate the effectiveness of agricultural management practices and controlled hunting in reducing damage to subsistence annual crops at the Cotapata National Park and Natural Area of Integrated Management. The design included seven fields with modified agricultural practices, four fields subjected to control hunting, and five fields held as controls. We registered cultivar type, density, frequency of visiting species to the field, crops lost to wildlife, species responsible for damage, and crop biomass. Most frequent species in the fields were Dasyprocta punctata and Dasypus novemcinctus. Hunted plots were visited 1.6 times more frequently than agriculturally managed plots. Crop lost to wildlife averaged 7.28% at agriculturally managed plots, 4.59% in plots subjected to hunting, and 27.61% in control plots. Species mainly responsible for damage were Pecari tajacu, D. punctata, and Sapajus apella. We concluded that both management strategies were effective to reduce damage by >50% as compared to unmanaged crop plots.

Highlights

  • El daño causado por fauna silvestre en cultivos agrícolas constituye una de las causas más frecuentes de conflicto dentro y fuera de las áreas protegidas (Newmark, Manyanza, Gamassa, & Sariko, 1994; Fungo, 2011; Baldwin, Salmon, Schmidt, & Timm, 2012)

  • Wildlife is often blamed for causing damage to human activities, including agricultural practices and the result may be a conflict between human interests and species conservation

  • A formal assessment of the magnitude of damage is necessary to adequately conduct management practices and an assessment of the efficiency of different management practices is necessary to enable managers to mitigate the conflict with rural people

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Summary

MATERIALES Y MÉTODOS

Área de estudio: El estudio se llevó a cabo en la gestión agrícola 2003-2004, en el Parque Nacional y Área Natural de Manejo Integrado (PN) Cotapata (68o18’ - 16o20’ SW, 68o03’ - 16o 05’ NW, 67o43’ - 16o10’NE y 16o18’ SE), entre los municipios de Coroico y La Paz, Bolivia. A lo largo de todo el estudio, un promedio de 5.96% (DE=1.55) de los huelleros activados alrededor de las parcelas fue visitado cada mes, mientras que un promedio de 12.1% (DE=1.96) de los huelleros activados mensualmente en bosque tuvo visitas. Las especies con mayor frecuencia de visitas (FV) a los huelleros del bosque fueron D. punctata, P. tajacu y C. paca; alrededor de los cultivos fueron más frecuentes D. punctata y D. branickii (Fig. 1). Plantación atacada y especies responsables: Considerando las tres especies cultivadas bajo análisis, se perdió en promedio el 7.3% de la plantación en PAg, 4.6% en PCA y 27.6% en PCo. La plantación atacada difirió para los cultivos de maíz y yuca, pero no para la walusa. La proporción de plantación perdida (para los tres cultivos) en PAg y PCA fue 2.6 y 14.4 veces menor que en PCo, respectivamente. Se muestran las medianas y el rango intercuartílico (entre paréntesis)

Chaco Bosque
Findings
Control Tratamiento
Full Text
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