Safeguarding human–wildlife cooperation
Abstract: Human–wildlife cooperation occurs when humans and free‐living wild animals actively coordinate their behavior to achieve a mutually beneficial outcome. These interactions provide important benefits to both the human and wildlife communities involved, have wider impacts on the local ecosyst...
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Conservation Letters
2022
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ftunivcam:oai:www.repository.cam.ac.uk:1810/337981 2023-10-29T02:39:21+01:00 Safeguarding human–wildlife cooperation van der Wal, Jessica EM Spottiswoode, Claire N Uomini, Natalie T Cantor, Mauricio Daura‐Jorge, Fábio G Afan, Anap I Attwood, Mairenn C Amphaeris, Jenny Balasani, Fatima Begg, Colleen M Blair, Cameron J Bronstein, Judith L Buanachique, Iahaia O Cuthill, Rion RT Das, Jewel Deb, Apurba Dixit, Tanmay Dlamini, Gcina S Dounias, Edmond Gedi, Isa I Gruber, Martin Hoffmann, Lilian S Holzlehner, Tobias Isack, Hussein A Laltaika, Eliupendo A Lloyd‐Jones, David J Lund, Jess Machado, Alexandre MS Mahadevan, L Moreno, Ignacio B Nwaogu, Chima J Pereira, Valdomiro L Pierotti, Raymond Rucunua, Seliano A dos Santos, Wilson F Serpa, Nathalia Smith, Brian D Tolkova, Irina Tun, Tint Valle‐Pereira, João VS Wood, Brian M Wrangham, Richard W Cram, Dominic L 2022-06-10T02:30:22Z text/xml application/pdf https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/337981 https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.85387 en eng Conservation Letters https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/337981 doi:10.17863/CAM.85387 REVIEW animal culture biocultural conservation biodiversity conservation dolphins honeyguides human–wildlife interactions interspecies cooperation mutualism orcas wolves Article 2022 ftunivcam https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.85387 2023-10-05T22:19:33Z Abstract: Human–wildlife cooperation occurs when humans and free‐living wild animals actively coordinate their behavior to achieve a mutually beneficial outcome. These interactions provide important benefits to both the human and wildlife communities involved, have wider impacts on the local ecosystem, and represent a unique intersection of human and animal cultures. The remaining active forms are human–honeyguide and human–dolphin cooperation, but these are at risk of joining several inactive forms (including human–wolf and human–orca cooperation). Human–wildlife cooperation faces a unique set of conservation challenges, as it requires multiple components—a motivated human and wildlife partner, a suitable environment, and compatible interspecies knowledge—which face threats from ecological and cultural changes. To safeguard human–wildlife cooperation, we recommend: (i) establishing ethically sound conservation strategies together with the participating human communities; (ii) conserving opportunities for human and wildlife participation; (iii) protecting suitable environments; (iv) facilitating cultural transmission of traditional knowledge; (v) accessibly archiving Indigenous and scientific knowledge; and (vi) conducting long‐term empirical studies to better understand these interactions and identify threats. Tailored safeguarding plans are therefore necessary to protect these diverse and irreplaceable interactions. Broadly, our review highlights that efforts to conserve biological and cultural diversity should carefully consider interactions between human and animal cultures. Please see AfricanHoneyguides.com/abstract‐translations for Kiswahili and Portuguese translations of the abstract. Article in Journal/Newspaper Orca Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository |
op_collection_id |
ftunivcam |
language |
English |
topic |
REVIEW animal culture biocultural conservation biodiversity conservation dolphins honeyguides human–wildlife interactions interspecies cooperation mutualism orcas wolves |
spellingShingle |
REVIEW animal culture biocultural conservation biodiversity conservation dolphins honeyguides human–wildlife interactions interspecies cooperation mutualism orcas wolves van der Wal, Jessica EM Spottiswoode, Claire N Uomini, Natalie T Cantor, Mauricio Daura‐Jorge, Fábio G Afan, Anap I Attwood, Mairenn C Amphaeris, Jenny Balasani, Fatima Begg, Colleen M Blair, Cameron J Bronstein, Judith L Buanachique, Iahaia O Cuthill, Rion RT Das, Jewel Deb, Apurba Dixit, Tanmay Dlamini, Gcina S Dounias, Edmond Gedi, Isa I Gruber, Martin Hoffmann, Lilian S Holzlehner, Tobias Isack, Hussein A Laltaika, Eliupendo A Lloyd‐Jones, David J Lund, Jess Machado, Alexandre MS Mahadevan, L Moreno, Ignacio B Nwaogu, Chima J Pereira, Valdomiro L Pierotti, Raymond Rucunua, Seliano A dos Santos, Wilson F Serpa, Nathalia Smith, Brian D Tolkova, Irina Tun, Tint Valle‐Pereira, João VS Wood, Brian M Wrangham, Richard W Cram, Dominic L Safeguarding human–wildlife cooperation |
topic_facet |
REVIEW animal culture biocultural conservation biodiversity conservation dolphins honeyguides human–wildlife interactions interspecies cooperation mutualism orcas wolves |
description |
Abstract: Human–wildlife cooperation occurs when humans and free‐living wild animals actively coordinate their behavior to achieve a mutually beneficial outcome. These interactions provide important benefits to both the human and wildlife communities involved, have wider impacts on the local ecosystem, and represent a unique intersection of human and animal cultures. The remaining active forms are human–honeyguide and human–dolphin cooperation, but these are at risk of joining several inactive forms (including human–wolf and human–orca cooperation). Human–wildlife cooperation faces a unique set of conservation challenges, as it requires multiple components—a motivated human and wildlife partner, a suitable environment, and compatible interspecies knowledge—which face threats from ecological and cultural changes. To safeguard human–wildlife cooperation, we recommend: (i) establishing ethically sound conservation strategies together with the participating human communities; (ii) conserving opportunities for human and wildlife participation; (iii) protecting suitable environments; (iv) facilitating cultural transmission of traditional knowledge; (v) accessibly archiving Indigenous and scientific knowledge; and (vi) conducting long‐term empirical studies to better understand these interactions and identify threats. Tailored safeguarding plans are therefore necessary to protect these diverse and irreplaceable interactions. Broadly, our review highlights that efforts to conserve biological and cultural diversity should carefully consider interactions between human and animal cultures. Please see AfricanHoneyguides.com/abstract‐translations for Kiswahili and Portuguese translations of the abstract. |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
van der Wal, Jessica EM Spottiswoode, Claire N Uomini, Natalie T Cantor, Mauricio Daura‐Jorge, Fábio G Afan, Anap I Attwood, Mairenn C Amphaeris, Jenny Balasani, Fatima Begg, Colleen M Blair, Cameron J Bronstein, Judith L Buanachique, Iahaia O Cuthill, Rion RT Das, Jewel Deb, Apurba Dixit, Tanmay Dlamini, Gcina S Dounias, Edmond Gedi, Isa I Gruber, Martin Hoffmann, Lilian S Holzlehner, Tobias Isack, Hussein A Laltaika, Eliupendo A Lloyd‐Jones, David J Lund, Jess Machado, Alexandre MS Mahadevan, L Moreno, Ignacio B Nwaogu, Chima J Pereira, Valdomiro L Pierotti, Raymond Rucunua, Seliano A dos Santos, Wilson F Serpa, Nathalia Smith, Brian D Tolkova, Irina Tun, Tint Valle‐Pereira, João VS Wood, Brian M Wrangham, Richard W Cram, Dominic L |
author_facet |
van der Wal, Jessica EM Spottiswoode, Claire N Uomini, Natalie T Cantor, Mauricio Daura‐Jorge, Fábio G Afan, Anap I Attwood, Mairenn C Amphaeris, Jenny Balasani, Fatima Begg, Colleen M Blair, Cameron J Bronstein, Judith L Buanachique, Iahaia O Cuthill, Rion RT Das, Jewel Deb, Apurba Dixit, Tanmay Dlamini, Gcina S Dounias, Edmond Gedi, Isa I Gruber, Martin Hoffmann, Lilian S Holzlehner, Tobias Isack, Hussein A Laltaika, Eliupendo A Lloyd‐Jones, David J Lund, Jess Machado, Alexandre MS Mahadevan, L Moreno, Ignacio B Nwaogu, Chima J Pereira, Valdomiro L Pierotti, Raymond Rucunua, Seliano A dos Santos, Wilson F Serpa, Nathalia Smith, Brian D Tolkova, Irina Tun, Tint Valle‐Pereira, João VS Wood, Brian M Wrangham, Richard W Cram, Dominic L |
author_sort |
van der Wal, Jessica EM |
title |
Safeguarding human–wildlife cooperation |
title_short |
Safeguarding human–wildlife cooperation |
title_full |
Safeguarding human–wildlife cooperation |
title_fullStr |
Safeguarding human–wildlife cooperation |
title_full_unstemmed |
Safeguarding human–wildlife cooperation |
title_sort |
safeguarding human–wildlife cooperation |
publisher |
Conservation Letters |
publishDate |
2022 |
url |
https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/337981 https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.85387 |
genre |
Orca |
genre_facet |
Orca |
op_relation |
https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/337981 doi:10.17863/CAM.85387 |
op_doi |
https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.85387 |
_version_ |
1781066188653068288 |