Addressing the challenge of wildlife conservation in urban landscapes by increasing human tolerance for wildlife
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Date
Authors
Puri, Mahi
Johannsen, Kristina L.
Goode, Kaitlin O.
Pienaar, Elizabeth Frances
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Abstract
Urbanization is a key driver of global environmental change and is adversely impacting wildlife populations. Human tolerance for wildlife is critical to wildlife conservation in urban areas.
Using metropolitan Atlanta, Georgia, United States, as a case study, we investigated human tolerance for a range of different wildlife species. Almost half of the human–wildlife interactions that are reported to the state wildlife agency originate from metropolitan Atlanta, which is one of the fastest growing metropolises in the United States.
We surveyed a representative sample of 1006 residents of metropolitan Atlanta in 2022. We found heterogeneity in respondents' tolerance for various species, although most respondents were intolerant of bobcats, coyotes, opossums and snakes. Respondents' tolerance for different species largely depended on their attitudes and emotions towards species, and their basic beliefs pertaining to wildlife and the relationships between humans and wildlife. We found some evidence that tolerance also depended on people's prior interactions with wildlife, their beliefs that they can mitigate conflicts with wildlife and their demographic characteristics.
Our results suggest that communication that improves urban residents' attitudes towards wildlife and/or reinforces positive emotions towards wildlife may increase wildlife tolerance in urban areas.
Description
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT : Deidentified data supporting our results are publicly available on Zenodo at: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10447632.
DATA S1 : Survey instrument: Understanding people's opinions of wildlife in urban and residential areas.
SUPPLEMENTARY TABLES : TABLE S1: Demographic and socio-economic characteristics of survey respondents, metropolitan Atlanta, United States, January–April 2022 (n = 1006). TABLE S2: Number of respondents who interacted with wildlife, including type of human–wildlife interactions and the wildlife with which respondents have interacted, metropolitan Atlanta, United States, 2022. TABLE S3: Respondents' attitudes towards wildlife, metropolitan Atlanta, United States, January–April 2022 (n = 1006). TABLE S4: Respondents' emotions towards wildlife, metropolitan Atlanta, United States, January–April 2022. TABLE S5: Respondent' self-efficacy pertaining to managing interactions with wildlife, metropolitan Atlanta, United States, January–April 2022. TABLE S6: Respondent' trust in the Georgia Department of Natural Resources to manage wildlife and human–wildlife conflicts, metropolitan Atlanta, United States, January–April 2022 (n = 1006).
DATA S1 : Survey instrument: Understanding people's opinions of wildlife in urban and residential areas.
SUPPLEMENTARY TABLES : TABLE S1: Demographic and socio-economic characteristics of survey respondents, metropolitan Atlanta, United States, January–April 2022 (n = 1006). TABLE S2: Number of respondents who interacted with wildlife, including type of human–wildlife interactions and the wildlife with which respondents have interacted, metropolitan Atlanta, United States, 2022. TABLE S3: Respondents' attitudes towards wildlife, metropolitan Atlanta, United States, January–April 2022 (n = 1006). TABLE S4: Respondents' emotions towards wildlife, metropolitan Atlanta, United States, January–April 2022. TABLE S5: Respondent' self-efficacy pertaining to managing interactions with wildlife, metropolitan Atlanta, United States, January–April 2022. TABLE S6: Respondent' trust in the Georgia Department of Natural Resources to manage wildlife and human–wildlife conflicts, metropolitan Atlanta, United States, January–April 2022 (n = 1006).
Keywords
Attitudes, Emotion, Environmental justice, Human–wildlife conflict, Self-efficacy, Urbanization, SDG-15: Life on land
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG-15:Life on land
Citation
Puri, M., Johannsen, K.L., Goode, K.O., & Pienaar, E.F. (2024). Addressing the challenge of wildlife conservation in urban landscapes by increasing human tolerance for wildlife. People and Nature, 6, 1116–1129. https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10604.