Abstract

Abstract Reversing global declines in predator populations is a major conservation objective, though people frequently come into conflict over carnivore conservation. As part of a national recovery programme for the pine marten Martes martes, a protected mesocarnivore in the UK, we used Q‐methodology to understand the perspectives of residents living in an area in which a pine marten translocation project was planned. In contrast to binary ‘for or against’ characterizations of debates surrounding such projects, we identified four perspectives with distinct priorities and concerns. A single perspective, ‘Concerned Manager’, opposed the translocation and marten recovery more generally, was apprehensive about impacts and favoured traditional predator management practices. Support was characterized by three perspectives: ‘Environmental Protectionist’, ‘Natural Resource Steward’ and ‘Cautious Pragmatist’. Two explicitly supported the translocation but differed in their priorities: Environmental Protectionist framed marten restoration as an ethical imperative, whereas Natural Resource Steward emphasized ecological and economic benefits. Cautious Pragmatist supported marten recovery, but expressed ambivalence about the translocation. We identified areas of divergence between the four perspectives, particularly surrounding risks posed by martens and need for predator control. We identified two areas of consensus among the four perspectives: support for a biodiverse environment and translocations as a means of achieving this (though this was contingent on the species), and agreement there would be economic and ecological benefits if martens controlled non‐native grey squirrels Sciurus carolinensis. We highlight that perspectives on this project were influenced by wider issues of wildlife management and conservation, particularly the impact and management of increasing populations of another mesocarnivore, the badger Meles meles. Negative experiences and perceptions of badgers were germane to the Concerned Manager perspective, and their fear that protected status would preclude marten population control. ‘Rewilding’ emerged as a divisive background issue, against which some participants evaluated the translocation. In facilitating understanding of perspectives and establishing the contexts through which they were formed, we found that Q‐methodology enabled us, as a team comprising conservation practitioners and researchers, to engage meaningfully with affected residents. We recommend the tool as a useful step in assessing social feasibility of conservation translocations. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.

Highlights

  • Direct and indirect competition for resources between humans and carnivores frequently leads to situations where their coexistence is strained, and predator management invariably takes place in complex socio-ecological contexts, in part as a result of actual and perceived risks to humans or their livelihoods

  • One participant echoed the views of a sheep farmer who had contributed to the interview stage, expressing concern about rewilding, where the pine marten translocation was perceived as the ‘thin end of the wedge’, paving the way for larger predators and the beaver Castor fiber, while the other participant lamented the loss of ground nesting birds, implying that the pine marten project would undermine the efforts he had made to protect them, stating ‘it's farmers who look after the countryside’

  • We have identified a diverse set of perspectives within the community of residents most directly affected by a proposed carnivore translocation

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Direct and indirect competition for resources between humans and carnivores frequently leads to situations where their coexistence is strained, and predator management invariably takes place in complex socio-ecological contexts, in part as a result of actual and perceived risks to humans or their livelihoods. The Trust published a broad scale feasibility assessment of pine marten reinforcements (MacPherson, 2014), focusing on habitat assessment, site selection, ecological impacts and, to a lesser extent, public attitudes towards reinforcements The latter involved a public opinion survey, in which 87.3% of 617 respondents expressed support for ‘restocking’ of pine martens in Wales, with substantive opposition expressed by those working in farming, gamekeeping and estate management, and based on fears for predation of resident wildlife, prioritizing the conservation of any residual, native pine martens and a lack of suitable habitat. We hoped that this approach could facilitate a more substantive means of communication between members of our team, as conservation practitioners, and affected residents, and a greater degree of participation in early planning processes, compared to other potential approaches (Mazur & Asah, 2013; Ockwell, 2008; Watts & Stenner, 2012)

| METHODS
Concerned Manager
Findings
| DISCUSSION
Full Text
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