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Why do models fail to assess properly the sustainability of duiker (Cephalophus spp.) hunting in Central Africa?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2008

Nathalie van Vliet*
Affiliation:
Centre for International Forestry Research, c/o IITA–HFEC, B.P. 2008, Yaoundé, Cameroon.
Robert Nasi
Affiliation:
Centre for International Forestry Research, Centre International de Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement, Campus International de Baillarguet, 34 398 Montpellier cedex 5, France.
*
*Centre for International Forestry Research, c/o IITA–HFEC, B.P. 2008, Yaoundé, Cameroon. E-mail n.vanvliet@cgiar.org
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Abstract

Hunting of wildlife in Central Africa is largely considered to be unsustainable. Several studies indicate that most mammal species should already have disappeared from many Central African forests but markets continue to be supplied with bushmeat, with no sign of large scale extinction of the most common species. Most studies of the sustainability of duiker (Cephalophus spp.) hunting in Central Africa are based on the same index of hunting. We illustrate how uncertainty is accumulated in these estimations of sustainability. We show that the results obtained in different sites are not comparable because a variety of methods have been used to calculate the parameters of the model and each of the methods has different sources of error. For the assessment of maximum sustainable harvest for duikers, the studies reviewed differ mainly in the value chosen for the hypothetical adjustment factor, and the method used to calculate the rate of maximum population increase and to estimate duiker population densities. For the assessment of annual hunting offtake the studies differ mainly in the scale at which they were conducted (village or regional), and sampling and extrapolation methods. Without evaluation of accuracy and standardization of methods for the estimation of maximum sustainable harvest and annual offtake, conclusions regarding harvesting based on biological indices should be treated with extreme caution.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna & Flora International 2008

Introduction

Many studies have documented that bushmeat is the main source of protein, and in some cases the most important source of income, for rural people in the Congo Basin (Lahm, Reference Lahm1993; Wilkie & Carpenter, Reference Wilkie and Carpenter1999; Bakarr et al., Reference Bakarr, da Fonseca, Mittermeier, Rylands and Paenemilla2001). With the rapid increase of human population densities since the 1920s (Hochschild, Reference Hochschild1998), a growing number of studies have expressed concern about the scale of bushmeat exploitation in the Congo Basin.

An increasing number of authors have tried to determine the effect of hunting and the level at which it becomes unsustainable in the Democratic Republic of Congo (Hart, Reference Hart, Robinson and Bennett2000), Central African Republic (Noss, Reference Noss1998a,Reference Nossb, Reference Noss, Robinson and Bennett2000), Gabon (Feer, Reference Feer, Hladik, Hladik, Ragezy, Linares, Koppert and Froment1993, Reference Feer, Hladik, Hladik, Ragezy, Linares, Koppert and Froment1996; Lahm, Reference Lahm1993), Cameroon (Dethier, Reference Dethier1995; Delvingt et al., Reference Delvingt, Dethier, Auzel, Jeanmart and Delvingt1997; Muchaal & Ngandjui, Reference Muchaal and Ngandjui1999; Ngandjui & Blanc, Reference Ngandjui and Blanc2000; Bousquet et al., Reference Bousquet, LePage, Bakam and Takforyan2001) and Equatorial Guinea (Fa et al., Reference Fa, Juste, Perez del Val and Castroviejo1995, Reference Fa, Ryan and Bell2005). Most authors have based their studies on small forest duikers (Cephalophus spp.), given their importance in hunting offtake. Duikers are among the most hunted species in Central Africa both in terms of number and biomass (Lahm, Reference Lahm1991; Juste et al., Reference Juste, Fa, Perez del Val and Castroviejo1995; Muchaal & Ngandjui, Reference Muchaal and Ngandjui1999; see Wilkie & Carpenter, Reference Wilkie and Carpenter1999, for a review).

Different methods have been used to assess hunting sustainability. Some authors have used the comparison of hunting offtake over time (Fa et al., Reference Fa, Ryan and Bell2005) or the comparison of mammal abundance and age structure between hunted and non-hunted sites (Lahm, Reference Lahm1993; Hart, Reference Hart, Robinson and Bennett2000). These methods do not indicate the intensity at which hunting becomes unsustainable. Others have used biological indices to assess sustainability, the three most popular of which are Robinson & Redford's model (Reference Robinson and Redford1991), the Unified Harvest Model (Bodmer et al., Reference Bodmer, Fang, Moya and Gill1994), and the Stock Recruitment Model, which has its origin in fisheries research.

These biological indices allow the assessment of a maximum sustainable harvest based on the density and productivity of the population. Of 17 publications dealing with the estimation of hunting sustainability for duikers in Central Africa, 13 have used biological indices (Feer, Reference Feer, Hladik, Hladik, Ragezy, Linares, Koppert and Froment1993, Reference Feer, Hladik, Hladik, Ragezy, Linares, Koppert and Froment1996; Fa et al., Reference Fa, Juste, Perez del Val and Castroviejo1995; Fitzgibbon et al., Reference Fitzgibbon, Mogaka and Fanshawe1995; Noss, Reference Noss1998a,Reference Nossb, Reference Noss, Robinson and Bennett2000; Dethier & Ghuirgui, Reference Dethier and Ghuirgui1999; Muchaal & Ngandjui, Reference Muchaal and Ngandjui1999; Ngandjui & Blanc, Reference Ngandjui and Blanc2000; Delvingt et al., Reference Delvingt, Dethier, Auzel, Jeanmart and Delvingt1997; Wilkie et al., Reference Wilkie, Curran, Tsombe and Morelli1998). These studies warn of the unsustainability of hunting practices and the risk of extinction, and the term bushmeat has become synonymous with overexploitation (Cowlishaw et al., Reference Cowlishaw, Mendelson and Rowcliffe2005).

Meanwhile, urban markets continue to be supplied with fresh bushmeat, indicating a contradiction between the unsustainability demonstrated by biological indices and the apparent abundance of the resource. Alvard et al. (Reference Alvard, Robinson, Redford and Kaplan1997), Robinson & Bodmer (Reference Robinson and Bodmer1999) and Novaro et al. (Reference Novaro, Redford and Bodmer2000) recognized that, according to biological models, many studies report levels of harvest above sustainable values, yet these levels have been maintained or increased over time with no sign of population depletion (Salas & Kim, Reference Salas and Kim2002). Noss (Reference Noss, Robinson and Bennett2000) suggested that models for calculating sustainable harvest may produce conservative estimates.

Milner-Gulland & Akçakaya (Reference Milner-Gulland and Akçakaya2001) demonstrated the general uncertainty inherent in the use of biological indices to assess sustainability. Our purpose here is to illustrate these uncertainties using duiker hunting as an example. We review the existing literature on estimations of the sustainability of duiker hunting based on biological indices, and describe the variety of methods used to estimate the parameters of Robinson & Redford's (Reference Robinson and Redford1991) model. Using a step-by-step approach we highlight the different sources of error in each of the methods and demonstrate how uncertainty is accumulated in the estimation of duiker hunting sustainability.

Maximum sustainable harvest

Robinson & Redford's (Reference Robinson and Redford1991) index of sustainability is a simple, practical equation to calculate a maximum sustainable harvest (MSH):

where h is a hypothetical adjustment factor, P max = maximum production of the population, r max = rate of maximum population increase, and D = population density. Studies of duiker hunting sustainability have used a variety of methods to estimate the parameters of the model (Fig. 1), and the 13 studies considered here differ in (1) the value chosen for h, (2) the method used to calculate r max, and (3) the method to determine D.

Fig. 1 Flowchart indicating the different methods used to assess maximum sustainable harvest (MSH), taking the blue duiker as an example.

Hypothetical adjustment factor (h)

Robinson & Redford (Reference Robinson and Redford1991) assume that hunting substitutes for a proportion of the natural mortality, rather than increases total mortality of a population. Therefore, they suggested that the maximum sustainable harvest is equal to the maximum production (P max) multiplied by a hypothetical adjustment factor that accounts for pre-reproductive and adult reproductive mortality. The value of the hypothetical factor was estimated for Neotropical species and is 0.6, 0.4 or 0.2 for animals whose longevity is < 5 years, 5–10 years, and > 10 years, respectively. The same values were applied by different authors to African species without any readjustment (Robinson & Redford, Reference Robinson and Redford1991). Although duiker species do not form a homogeneous group (e.g. they have body weights of 5–80 kg), the same hypothetical factor has been used for different species. Discrepancies among authors in considering duikers as relatively short- or long-lived species result in using h = 0.4 (Fa et al., Reference Fa, Juste, Perez del Val and Castroviejo1995; Noss, Reference Noss1998b; Wilkie et al., Reference Wilkie, Curran, Tsombe and Morelli1998; Muchaal & Ngandjui, Reference Muchaal and Ngandjui1999; Ngandjui & Blanc, Reference Ngandjui and Blanc2000) or h = 0.2 (Fitzgibbon et al., Reference Fitzgibbon, Mogaka and Fanshawe1995; Delvingt et al., Reference Delvingt, Dethier, Auzel, Jeanmart and Delvingt1997; Noss, Reference Noss1998a, Reference Noss, Robinson and Bennett2000).

Rate of maximum population increase (r max)

The rate of maximum population increase (r max) has been calculated either with Cole's (Reference Cole1954) or, less frequently, Caughley & Krebs’ formula (Reference Caughley and Krebs1983). Following Cole’s (Reference Cole1954) formula, r max is estimated from:

where a = age at first reproduction, w = age at last reproduction, and b = annual birth rate of female offspring. This equation can take into account changes in r max, depending on the variation of reproductive parameters with hunting pressure. However, possible variations for duikers have not been studied.

Cole's formula has two major disadvantages. Firstly, it uses the unrealistic assumption that there is no mortality of juveniles or adults prior to age w. However, studies of ungulate population dynamics have shown that the rate of adult survival is one of the most important parameters influencing the rate of population increase (Bourgarel, Reference Bourgarel2004). Secondly, the minimal population information required for Cole's formula is unknown for most duiker species. In most studies, identical values for reproduction parameters were used for all duiker species without distinguishing between blue C. monticola, red (C. callipygus, C. dorsalis, C. nigrifrons, C. leucogaster, C. ogylbi) or yellow C. sylvicultor duikers. Delvingt et al. (Reference Delvingt, Dethier, Auzel, Jeanmart and Delvingt1997) and Noss (Reference Noss1998a, Reference Noss, Robinson and Bennett2000) used unpublished data gathered by V.J. Wilson for duikers in captivity. Noss (Reference Noss1998a, Reference Nossb) used species specific data from Haltenorth & Diller (Reference Haltenorth and Diller1985). Fa et al. (Reference Fa, Juste, Perez del Val and Castroviejo1995), Wilkie et al. (Reference Wilkie, Curran, Tsombe and Morelli1998), Muchaal & Ngandjui (1998) and Ngandjui & Blanc (Reference Ngandjui and Blanc2000) used population data derived from Payne (Reference Payne1992), where maximum longevity is used as a substitute for w.

Because knowledge of duiker mortality and fecundity rates are poor, some authors (Feer, Reference Feer, Hladik, Hladik, Ragezy, Linares, Koppert and Froment1996; Delvingt et al., Reference Delvingt, Dethier, Auzel, Jeanmart and Delvingt1997; Noss, Reference Noss1998b; Dethier & Ghuirgui, Reference Dethier and Ghuirgui1999) used Caughley & Krebs’ (Reference Caughley and Krebs1983) formula:

where r max is only a function of the mean population weight (P) in kg. To take into account the age structure of the population, Feer (Reference Feer, Hladik, Hladik, Ragezy, Linares, Koppert and Froment1996) and Delvingt et al. (Reference Delvingt, Dethier, Auzel, Jeanmart and Delvingt1997) used 75% of the mean weight of an adult for P. Dethier & Ghuirgui (Reference Dethier and Ghuirgui1999) used data from Noss (Reference Noss1998b), who measured mean population weight based on carcasses sold in markets (Table 1).

Table 1 Estimations of minimum and maximum mean population weight and population maximum increase rate (r max) based on Caughley & Kreb's (1983) equation for six duikers (Cephalophus spp.).

Density (D)

Because the population density is difficult to measure in the field, Robinson & Redford (Reference Robinson and Redford1991) suggested using a predictive value of D based on the carrying capacity (K). K is estimated as equal to the population density of a forest where there is no hunting. A logistic growth curve suggests that P max is reached for a density of 0.5K but based on population curves for Neotropical species, Robinson & Redford (Reference Robinson and Redford1991) showed that for species that do not breed until late in life, maximum productivity occurs at 0.6K, thus:

Feer (Reference Feer, Hladik, Hladik, Ragezy, Linares, Koppert and Froment1996) and Dethier & Ghuirgui (Reference Dethier and Ghuirgui1999) used density measured in an undisturbed site as the value of K. Feer (Reference Feer, Hladik, Hladik, Ragezy, Linares, Koppert and Froment1996) compared the results obtained with D = 0.5K with a more conservative formula, where P max is reached when the population density = 0.7K.

Other authors (Fa et al., Reference Fa, Juste, Perez del Val and Castroviejo1995; Delvingt et al., Reference Delvingt, Dethier, Auzel, Jeanmart and Delvingt1997; Noss, Reference Noss1998a,Reference Nossb; Muchaal & Ngandjui, Reference Muchaal and Ngandjui1999; Ngandjui & Blanc, Reference Ngandjui and Blanc2000) have used a direct value of D, measured in hunted sites, as recommended by Bodmer et al. (Reference Bodmer, Fang, Moya and Gill1994), using a variety of techniques: capture-recapture methods using nets (Dubost, Reference Dubost1980; Hart, Reference Hart1985; Koster & Hart, Reference Koster and Hart1988; Feer, Reference Feer1989); line transect methods using either night-time visual counts (Lahm, Reference Lahm1993; Noss, Reference Noss1998a), day-time visual counts (Payne, Reference Payne1992; Lahm, Reference Lahm1993; Dethier, Reference Dethier1995; Delvingt et al., Reference Delvingt, Dethier, Auzel, Jeanmart and Delvingt1997; Koster & Hart, Reference Koster and Hart1998; Lannoy et al., Reference Lannoy, Gaidet, Chardonnet and Fanguinoveny2003), pellet counts (Wilkie & Finn, Reference Wilkie and Finn1990; Payne, Reference Payne1992; WCS, 1996) or call counts (Hart Reference Hart1985, Dethier, Reference Dethier1995; Koster & Hart, Reference Koster and Hart1998; Struhsaker, Reference Struhsaker1998). Other methods include net hunting encounters by counting the number of animals seen per searched area (Noss, Reference Noss, Robinson and Bennett2000) and densities estimated from home range size and population structure (Feer, Reference Feer, Hladik, Hladik, Ragezy, Linares, Koppert and Froment1996). For C. leucogaster, C. nigrifrons and C. sylvicultor the number of observations did not always allow densities to be determined; Feer (Reference Feer, Hladik, Hladik, Ragezy, Linares, Koppert and Froment1996) estimated densities using their relative abundance in a sample compared to the abundance of C. callipygus.

Uncertainty in assessment of maximum sustainable harvest

The estimation of maximum sustainable harvest suffers from two main sources of uncertainty: one related to the values and methods used to assess the parameters of the model, the other related to the variety of calculation methods used.

For the estimation of r max, Cole's formula gives heterogeneous results depending on the reproductive parameters chosen (Table 2). The available reproductive parameters come from data on a few duikers in captivity. There is particular disagreement on the annual birth rate of female offspring (0.17–0.5), age at first (0.91–2.5 years) and last reproduction (7–11) years. For C. monticola the values of rmax calculated with Cole's formula are particularly variable, from 0.12 (Noss, Reference Noss1998b) to 0.49 (Fa et al., Reference Fa, Juste, Perez del Val and Castroviejo1995).

Table 2 Estimation of maximum population increase rate (r max) based on Cole's (Reference Cole1954) equation for C. callipygus, C. dorsalis and C. monticola.

We compared results for the value of maximum sustainable harvest (Table 3) with r max calculated using either Cole's (r max1) or Caughley & Krebs’ equation (r max2) for C. monticola, C. dorsalis and C. callipygus. We used data from Feer (Reference Feer, Hladik, Hladik, Ragezy, Linares, Koppert and Froment1996) for the estimation of D. For C. callipygus and C. dorsalis, maximum sustainable harvest calculated with r max2 is within the range of that calculated with r max1. For C. monticola, r max2 gives a value four times higher than with r max1.

Table 3 Comparison of r max calculated with Cole's (Reference Cole1954; r max1) and Caughley & Krebs’ (Reference Caughley and Krebs1983; r max2) equations and related values of maximum sustainable harvest (MSH) for C. callipygus, C. dorsalis and C. monticola.

The values of D obtained with different methods are highly variable, sometimes by a factor of > 100. In the Ituri forest, Democratic Republic of Congo, Koster & Hart (Reference Koster and Hart1988) estimated a duiker biomass of 174 kg km-2 using visual counts, whereas Wilkie & Finn (Reference Wilkie and Finn1990) estimated 1,497 kg km-2 counting pellet groups. Such differences raise the problem of the accuracy of existing duiker survey techniques. Each method has possible biases (Koster & Hart, Reference Koster and Hart1998; Struhsaker, Reference Struhsaker1998; Newing, Reference Newing2001; Lannoy et al., Reference Lannoy, Gaidet, Chardonnet and Fanguinoveny2003) because of poor visibility in dense vegetation, shy animal behaviour, and the resemblance of different species. The difficulty and low rate of direct sightings explains the wide use of dung counts. However, van Vliet et al. (in press), have assessed the rate of error in species identification using dung and found that field identification was only reliable for C. sylvicultor.

We compared the results obtained for maximum sustainable harvest using call counts and day time visual counts for C. monticola, C. callipygus and C. dorsalis in Dja, Cameroon (Delvingt et al., Reference Delvingt, Dethier, Auzel, Jeanmart and Delvingt1997; Table 4). The authors used Cole's formula for the assessment of r max and MSH = 0.2 P max. For C. monticola and C. callipygus maximum sustainable harvest is more than seven times higher when densities are assessed using call counts than with day counts. For C. dorsalis maximum sustainable harvest obtained using call counts is less than twice that obtained with day counts.

Table 4 Values of maximum sustainable harvest (MSH) using the density obtained from both call counts and day counts for C. callipygus, C. dorsalis and C. monticola; rmax (= 34%) was calculated using the method of Cole (Reference Cole1954) and MSH was calculated with h = 0.2 (i.e. MSH = 0.2* Pmax).

Methods used to estimate hunting offtake, and possible sources of error

To analyse the sustainability of hunting the maximum sustainable harvest is compared to the observed annual offtake. If the offtake exceeds the estimated maximum sustainable harvest then hunting is not sustainable and can leave exploited populations vulnerable to extinction or disrupt ecosystem functioning. Harvest profiles have been obtained using sampling methods that differ according to the: (1) level at which studies were conducted (local or regional scale), (2) sampling method, (3) way authors extrapolated their data (Table 5).

Table 5 Methods used to assess hunting offtake in studies of the sustainability of duiker hunting.

Some authors have conducted studies at a regional level, registering the number and nature of carcasses sold in city markets (Fa et al., Reference Fa, Juste, Perez del Val and Castroviejo1995, Reference Fa, Garcia Yuste and Castelo2000; Juste et al., Reference Juste, Fa, Perez del Val and Castroviejo1995). Fa et al. (Reference Fa, Garcia Yuste and Castelo2000) have shown that bushmeat markets can be useful as indicators of the status of wildlife prey in the surrounding catchment area as long as the sampling effort is well designed. The available studies gathered data for one or two markets only, and thus their use in determining the impact of bushmeat extraction is limited to relatively small areas (Fa et al., Reference Fa, Johnson, Dupain, Lapuente, Köster and McDonald2004). The main difficulties when working at a regional level are the assessment of the catchment area and the sampling method. The catchment area is often calculated by evaluation of the total surface covered by all locations mentioned as bushmeat sources by bushmeat sellers. Fa et al. (Reference Fa, Johnson, Dupain, Lapuente, Köster and McDonald2004) assessed the efficiency of a number of methods for measuring the volume of bushmeat extracted and the proportion of total species traded, and found that: (1) only a large sample of markets permits useful inferences at a regional scale, (2) timing and coordination of sampling may be highly influential, and (3) sampling in blocks of days was as efficient as random sampling in estimating species richness but not carcass volume.

Harvest rates calculated from animals sold in markets underestimate the real harvest rate because only part of the hunting offtake is sold to markets. Colell et al. (Reference Colell, Maté and Fa1994) show that 20% of the antelopes caught in villages of southern Bioko, Equatorial Guinea, are for own consumption. Lahm (Reference Lahm, Hladik, Hladik, Ragezy, Linares, Koppert and Froment1996) showed in three villages of north-east Gabon that 34% of ungulates are are eaten in the village and not sold in cities. Some cultural taboos explain why some species are not sold in markets, e.g. C. sylvicultor and C. leucogaster in north-east Gabon (van Vliet, Reference van Vliet2008), thus resulting in an underestimation of offtake for these particular species.

Other studies were based on data collected at the village or household level while participating in hunting, or with regular (daily, weekly or monthly) interviews and monitoring of kills brought from the forest (Fitzgibbon et al., Reference Fitzgibbon, Mogaka and Fanshawe1995; Delvingt et al., Reference Delvingt, Dethier, Auzel, Jeanmart and Delvingt1997; Noss, Reference Noss1998a,Reference Nossb, Reference Noss, Robinson and Bennett2000; Wilkie et al., Reference Wilkie, Curran, Tsombe and Morelli1998; Dethier & Ghuirgui, Reference Dethier and Ghuirgui1999; Muchaal & Ngandjui, Reference Muchaal and Ngandjui1999; Ngandjui & Blanc, Reference Ngandjui and Blanc2000). In some cases only one hunting method was assessed (e.g. snares or nets) so that Maxmimum Sustainable Harvest was compared to offtake corresponding to one hunting method only.

The catchment area was estimated approximately for most of the studies either through the use of a global positioning system (Noss, Reference Noss1998a,Reference Nossb, Reference Noss, Robinson and Bennett2000) or considering a 15 km radius circle around the settlement (Wilkie et al., Reference Wilkie, Curran, Tsombe and Morelli1998). Delvingt et al. (Reference Delvingt, Dethier, Auzel, Jeanmart and Delvingt1997), Muchaal & Ngandjui (Reference Muchaal and Ngandjui1999), Dethier & Ghirgui (Reference Dethier and Ghuirgui1999) and Ngandjui & Blanc (Reference Ngandjui and Blanc2000) made a more precise estimation by mapping the area with the participation of volunteer hunters. Some authors did not mention the method used to estimate the catchment area.

For village level studies, because only a proportion of the total number of hunters per village was surveyed, data was extrapolated to the whole village to estimate the total hunting offtake per unit area per year. When only a few months were surveyed, the mean offtake per month was calculated and extrapolated for 1 year, without taking into account the temporal variability of hunting effort. The offtake rate (R offtake) per duiker species was calculated as follows:

where N s is the number of animals of the species captured per hunter, N h the number of hunters, and S the total catchments area. For snare hunters, the number of animals of a given species caught per hunter was assessed as the number of animals captured per snare multiplied by the number of snares per hunter.

Discussion

This review shows that maximum sustainable harvest for duikers is estimated with an accumulation of errors because of the difficulties in estimating model parameters for duiker species. Knowledge of duiker biology and ecology has remained poor because, as for many other shy tropical forest animals, their ecology is particularly difficult to study. Furthermore, research funds for ecology have focussed more on charismatic mammal species than on small, common mammal species. Studies of the sustainability of duiker hunting based on Robinson & Redford's index (Reference Robinson and Redford1991) have used such a variety of methods to assess the parameters of the model that any comparisons between sites are largely meaningless. The major areas of divergence concern: (1) the value of the hypothetical adjustment factor, the method used to calculate the rate of maximum population increase, and the assessment of duiker population densities, and (2) the scale at which studies were conducted, and the sampling and extrapolation methods for assessing annual offtake.

Our analyses suggest that for C. callipygus and C. dorsalis maximum sustainable harvest obtained using Cole's (Reference Cole1954) formula are within the range of that calculated with Caughley & Krebs’ (Reference Caughley and Krebs1983) formula. For C. monticola, however, maximum sustainable harvest based on Cole's formula gives much more conservative results: maximum sustainable harvest is 13 times higher when calculated using Caughley & Krebs’ equation. For C. monticola and C. callipygus maximum sustainable harvest is highly dependent on the survey method used to assess densities, with densities for abundant duiker species (C. monticola) more variable than those for rarer species (most red duikers and C. sylvicultor).

Hunting offtake in poorly known catchment areas is not accurately assessed when data are collected at the market level. At the village level, extensive effort to obtain the trust of hunters and their active participation must be foreseen prior to any offtake study. High temporal variability of hunting effort (van Vliet, Reference van Vliet2008) should be taken into account when data collected during one season are extrapolated to 1 year. Careful participatory mapping of the hunting territory would help to identify the catchment area, taking into account seasonal distribution of hunting pressure and the existence of non-hunted areas within the village territory (van Vliet, Reference van Vliet2008).

Prior to any further duiker sustainability studies based on Robinson & Redford's (Reference Robinson and Redford1991) index, we propose that the following are required: (1) Adaptation of the model to African mammals (e.g. are the hypothetical adjustment factors suggested by Robinson & Redford (Reference Robinson and Redford1991) accurate for African duikers?). (2) Determination of the most reliable and practical formula to assess the rate of maximum population increase for duikers, and testing of the variability of reproductive parameters under different hunting pressures. (3) Assessment of the accuracy and magnitude of error of duiker survey methods, with a large comparative study between classical methods (physical capture-recapture, line transects), and exploratory methods (call points, genetic capture-recapture) in an area of known population density (e.g. semi-captivity such as an enclosure). (4) Standardization of methods to assess the parameters of Robinson & Redford's (Reference Robinson and Redford1991) index when applied to duikers, to allow spatial and temporal comparisons.

We suggest that the use of biological models, such as Robinson & Redford's (Reference Robinson and Redford1991) index of sustainability, should not be used as an absolute measure of sustainability. Pure biological approaches should be coupled with ethno-biological and socio-economic approaches to assess changes in hunting practices, evolution of prey choice, and cultural and economical drivers of hunting activities for an integrated assessment of sustainability.

Acknowledgements

This document has been produced with the financial assistance of the IFAD and European Union. The views expressed herein can in no way be taken to reflect their official opinion.

Biographical sketches

Nathalie van Vliet is now coordinating the Landscape Mosaics Project for the Centre for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) in Cameroon. Her main research interests are survey methods for tropical forest ungulates, innovative hunting management methods, and participatory tools for sustainable management of natural resources. Robert Nasi has been undertaking research activities in ecology and management of tropical forests since 1982. He is currently principal scientist in the Environmental Services and Sustainable Uses of Forests programme of CIFOR.

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Figure 0

Fig. 1 Flowchart indicating the different methods used to assess maximum sustainable harvest (MSH), taking the blue duiker as an example.

Figure 1

Table 1 Estimations of minimum and maximum mean population weight and population maximum increase rate (rmax) based on Caughley & Kreb's (1983) equation for six duikers (Cephalophus spp.).

Figure 2

Table 2 Estimation of maximum population increase rate (rmax) based on Cole's (1954) equation for C. callipygus, C. dorsalis and C. monticola.

Figure 3

Table 3 Comparison of rmax calculated with Cole's (1954; rmax1) and Caughley & Krebs’ (1983; rmax2) equations and related values of maximum sustainable harvest (MSH) for C. callipygus, C. dorsalis and C. monticola.

Figure 4

Table 4 Values of maximum sustainable harvest (MSH) using the density obtained from both call counts and day counts for C. callipygus, C. dorsalis and C. monticola; rmax (= 34%) was calculated using the method of Cole (1954) and MSH was calculated with h = 0.2 (i.e. MSH = 0.2* Pmax).

Figure 5

Table 5 Methods used to assess hunting offtake in studies of the sustainability of duiker hunting.