Abstract

Large carnivores are decreasing in number due to growing pressure from an expanding human population. It is increasingly recognised that state-protected conservation areas are unlikely to be sufficient to protect viable populations of large carnivores, and that private land will be central to conservation efforts. In 2000, a fast-track land reform programme (FTLRP) was initiated in Zimbabwe, ostensibly to redress the racial imbalance in land ownership, but which also had the potential to break up large areas of carnivore habitat on private land. To date, research has focused on the impact of the FTLRP process on the different human communities, while impacts on wildlife have been overlooked. Here we provide the first systematic assessment of the impact of the FTLRP on the status of large carnivores. Spoor counts were conducted across private, resettled and communal land use types in order to estimate the abundance of large carnivores, and to determine how this had been affected by land reform. The density of carnivore spoor differed significantly between land use types, and was lower on resettlement land than on private land, suggesting that the resettlement process has resulted in a substantial decline in carnivore abundance. Habitat loss and high levels of poaching in and around resettlement areas are the most likely causes. The FTLRP resulted in the large-scale conversion of land that was used sustainably and productively for wildlife into unsustainable, unproductive agricultural land uses. We recommended that models of land reform should consider the type of land available, that existing expertise in land management should be retained where possible, and that resettlement programmes should be carefully planned in order to minimise the impacts on wildlife and on people.

Highlights

  • Large-bodied mammals of the order Carnivora are culturally important to humans; their body parts are used in ceremonies and traditional medicine and they feature in storytelling, mythology and witchcraft (Kruuk, 2002)

  • Large carnivores across the world are in decline as a result of the growing human population and increasing pressures on the environment (Di Marco et al, 2014; Gittleman, Macdonald & Wayne, 2001; Nowell & Jackson, 1996; Ray, Hunter & Zigouris, 2005; Woodroffe, 2000), and they are vulnerable to anthropogenic disturbance (Ray, Hunter & Zigouris, 2005; Sillero-Zubiri & Laurenson, 2001)

  • Bootstrap analyses on transects in the private land use types (LUTs) showed that variation in spoor frequency stabilized at approximately 30 spoor for lion, leopard, cheetah, brown hyaena and spotted hyaena, and at 60 spoor for wild dogs (Fig. 2)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Large-bodied mammals of the order Carnivora (hereafter referred to as large carnivores) are culturally important to humans; their body parts are used in ceremonies and traditional medicine and they feature in storytelling, mythology and witchcraft (Kruuk, 2002). Large carnivores are depicted in artworks, on currencies, on coats of arms and on the kits of sport teams (Loveridge et al, 2010). They can bring in large revenues through tourism (Barnes, 2001; Lindsey et al, 2007) and hunting (Jorge et al, 2013; Lindsey et al, 2006), but they can be a financial burden through predation on livestock (Rust & Marker, 2014). The importance of land outside of state-protected areas to biodiversity conservation is becoming increasingly clear (Bond et al, 2004; Fjeldsaet al., 2004; Kent & Hill, 2013)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call