Understanding and managing human tolerance for a large carnivore in a residential system

Item Metadata

Dublin Core

Title

Understanding and managing human tolerance for a large carnivore in a residential system

Description

Human tolerance for interactions with large carnivores is an important determinant of their persistence on the landscape, yet the relative importance of factors affecting tolerance is not fully understood. Further, the impact of management efforts to alter tolerance has not been adequately assessed. We developed a model containing a comprehensive set of predictors drawn from prior studies and tested it through a longitudinal survey measuring tolerance for black bears (Ursus americanus) in the vicinity of Durango, Colorado, USA. Predictors included human-bear conflicts, outcomes of interactions with bears, perceptions of benefits and risks from bears, trust in managers, perceived similarity with the goals of managers, personal control over risks, value orientations toward wildlife, and demographic factors. In addition, we monitored changes in tolerance resulting from a bear-proofing experiment designed to reduced garbage-related conflicts in the community. Residents who perceived greater benefits associated with bears and more positive impacts from bear-related interactions had higher tolerance. Residents who perceived greater risks and more negative impacts and who had greater trust in managers, domination wildlife value orientations, and older age were less tolerant. Conflicts with bears were not an important predictor, supported by our finding that changes in conflicts resulting from our bear-proofing experiment did not affect tolerance. In contrast to conservation approaches that focus primarily on decreasing human-wildlife conflicts, our findings suggest that communication approaches aimed at increasing public tolerance for carnivores could be improved by emphasizing the benefits and positive impacts of living with these species.

Bibliographic Citation

Lischka, S. A., T. L. Teel, H. E. Johnson, and K. R. Crooks. 2019. Understanding and managing human tolerance for a large carnivore in a residential system. Biological Conservation 238:1081–1089; doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2019.07.034

Creator

Lischka, Stacy A.
Teel, Tara L.
Johnson, Heather E.
Crooks, Kevin R.

Subject

Human tolerance
Human-bear conflict
Black bear

Extent

39 pages

Type

Article

Format

application/pdf

Language

English

Is Part Of

Biological conservation

Date Accepted

07/20/2019

Date Issued

08/30/2019

Date Modified

07/02/2019

Date Submitted

11/02/2018

Collection

Citation

Lischka, Stacy A. et al., “Understanding and managing human tolerance for a large carnivore in a residential system,” CPW Digital Collections, accessed April 24, 2024, https://cpw.cvlcollections.org/items/show/399.