Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-jn8rn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T06:51:55.289Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Conservation on community lands: the importance of equitable revenue sharing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 August 2008

ROSEMARY GROOM*
Affiliation:
School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1UG, UK
STEPHEN HARRIS
Affiliation:
School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Woodland Road, Bristol BS8 1UG, UK
*
*Correspondence: Dr Rosemary Groom e-mail: rosemary.groom@bristol.ac.uk

Summary

Attempts to establish local support for wildlife and conservation through the sharing of revenues and empowerment of local communities to manage their wildlife have proliferated over the past two decades. Data from two neighbouring Maasai group ranches in the wildlife dispersal area of Amboseli and Tsavo National Parks (Kenya) indicated one ranch generated considerable wildlife revenues from a tourist operation and community trust while the other received no direct benefits from wildlife. The overall attitude to wildlife on the ranch with wildlife revenues was significantly more positive, but attitudes within the ranch varied significantly, depending on both costs from wildlife and perception of the distribution of wildlife revenues. Ordinal logistic regression analyses showed that it was not the amount of revenue received or the scale of costs from wildlife which determined people's attitudes, but simply the presence or absence of wildlife benefits. The importance of addressing inequitable distribution of benefits is emphasized.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 2008

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adams, W.M. & Infield, M. (2003) Who is on the gorilla's payroll? Claims on tourist revenue from a Ugandan national park. World Development 31: 177190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Altmann, J., Alberts, S.C., Altmann, S.A. & Roy, S.B. (2002) Dramatic change in local climate patterns in the Amboseli basin, Kenya. African Journal of Ecology 40: 248251.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Archabald, K. & Naughton-Treves, L. (2001) Tourism sharing around national parks in western Uganda: early efforts to identify and reward local communities. Environmental Conservation 28: 135149.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arjunan, M., Holmes, C., Puyravaud, J.P. & Davidar, P. (2006) Do developmental initiatives influence local attitudes toward conservation? A case study from the Kalakad-Mundanthurai Tiger Reserve, India. Journal of Environmental Management 79: 188197.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Barrett, C.B. & Arcese, P. (1995) Are integrated conservation-development projects (ICDPs) sustainable? On the conservation of large mammals in Sub-Saharan Africa. World Development 23: 10731084.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bekure, S., de Leeuw, P.N., Grandin, B.E. & Neate, P.J.H. (1991) Maasai Herding. An Analysis of the Livestock Production System of Maasai Pastoralists in Eastern Kajiado District, Kenya. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: ILCA Systems Study 4. ILCA (International Livestock Centre for Africa): 172 pp.Google Scholar
Bulte, E.H. & Rondeau, D. (2005) Why compensating wildlife damages may be bad for conservation. Journal of Wildlife Management 69: 1419.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Campbell, D.J. (1999) Response to drought among farmers and herders in southern Kajiado District, Kenya: a comparison of 1972–1976 and 1994–1995. Human Ecology 27: 377415.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Child, B. (2000) Making wildlife pay: converting wildlife's comparative advantage into real incentives for having wildlife in African savannas, case studies from Zimbabwe and Zambia. In: Wildlife Conservation by Sustainable Use, ed. Prins, H.H.T., Grootenhuis, J.G. & Dolan, T.T., pp. 335387. Boston, USA: Kluwer Academic Publishers.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deodatus, F. (2000) Wildlife damage in rural areas with emphasis on Malawi. In: Wildlife Conservation by Sustainable Use, ed. Prins, H.H.T., Grootenhuis, J.G. & Dolan, T.T., pp. ??. Boston, USA: Kluwer Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Earnshaw, A. & Emerton, L. (2000) The economics of wildlife tourism: theory and reality for landholders in Africa. In: Wildlife Conservation by Sustainable Use, ed. Prins, H.H.T., Grootenhuis, J.G. & Dolan, T.T., pp. 315334. Boston, USA: Kluwer Academic Publishers.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fiallo, E.A. & Jacobson, S.K. (1995) Local communities and protected areas: attitudes of rural residents towards conservation in Ecuador. Environmental Conservation 22: 241249.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gadd, M.E. (2005) Conservation outside of parks: attitudes of local people in Laikipia, Kenya. Environmental Conservation 32: 5063.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gibson, C.C. & Marks, S.A. (1995) Transforming rural hunters into conservationists: an assessment of community-based wildlife management programs in Africa. World Development 23: 941957.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gillingham, S. & Lee, P.C. (1999) The impact of wildlife-related benefits on the conservation attitudes of local people around the Selous Game Reserve, Tanzania. Environmental Conservation 26: 218228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Groom, R. (2007) How to make land subdivision work: an analysis of the ecological and socio-economic factors affecting conservation outcomes during land privatisation in Kenyan Maasailand. Ph.D. thesis, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.Google Scholar
Hackel, J.D. (1999) Community conservation and the future of Africa's wildlife. Conservation Biology 13: 726734.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hartup, B.K. (1994) Community conservation in Belize: demography, resource use, and attitudes of participating landowners. Biological Conservation 69: 235241.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hazzah, L.N. (2007) Living among lions (Panthera leo): coexistence or killing? Community attitudes towards conservation initiatives and the motivations behind lion killing in Kenyan Maasailand. Masters of Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA.Google Scholar
Heinen, J.T. (1993) Park people relations in Kosi Tappu Wildlife Reserve, Nepal: a socio-economic analysis. Environmental Conservation 20: 2534.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Infield, M. (1988) Attitudes of a rural community towards conservation and a local conservation area in Natal, South Africa. Biological Conservation 45: 2146.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Infield, M. & Namara, A. (2001) Community attitudes and behavior towards conservation: an assessment of a community conservation programme around Lake Mburo National Park, Uganda. Oryx 35: 4860.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis, D., Kaweche, D.B. & Mwenya, A. (1990) Wildlife conservation outside protected areas – lessons from an experiment in Zambia. Conservation Biology 4: 171180.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marker, L.L., Mills, M.G.L. & Macdonald, D.W. (2003) Factors influencing perceptions of conflict and tolerance towards cheetahs on Namibian farmlands. Conservation Biology 17: 12901298.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McNeely, J.A. (1995) Expanding Partnerships in Conservation. Washington DC, USA: Island Press.Google Scholar
Ministry of Agriculture (1968) Annual Report. Nairobi, Kenya: Government Printers.Google Scholar
Mishra, C. (1997) Livestock depredation by large carnivores in the Indian trans-Himalaya: conflict perceptions and conservation prospects. Environmental Conservation 24: 338343.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mishra, C., Allen, P., McCarthy, T., Madhusudan, M.D., Agvaantserengiin, B. & Prins, H.H.T. (2003) The role of incentive programs in conserving the snow leopard. Conservation Biology 17: 15121520.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Newmark, W.D., Leonard, N.L., Sariko, H.I. & Gamassa, D.M. (1993) Conservation attitudes of local people living adjacent to five protected areas in Tanzania. Biological Conservation 63: 177183.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norton-Griffiths, M., Said, M.Y., Seernals, S., Kaelo, D.S., Coughenour, M., Lamprey, R.H., Thompson, D.M. & Reid, R.S. (2008) Land use economics in the Mara area of the Serengeti ecosystem. In: Serengeti III: Human Impacts on Ecosystem Dynamics., ed. Sinclair, A.R.E., Packer, C., Mduma, S.A.R. & Fryxell, J.M., (in press). Chicago, IL, USA: Chicago University Press.Google Scholar
Ntiati, P. (2002) Group ranch subdivision study in Loitokitok Division of Kajiado District, Kenya. LUCID Project, International Livestock Research Institute, Nairobi.Google Scholar
Ogada, M.O., Woodroffe, R., Oguge, N.O. & Frank, L.G. (2003) Limiting depredation by African carnivores: the role of livestock husbandry. Conservation Biology 17: 110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ogutu, Z.A. (2002) The impact of ecotourism on livelihood and natural resource management in Eselenkei, Amboseli Ecosystem, Kenya. Land Degradation and Development 13: 251256.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ottichilo, W.K., Grunblatt, J.M., Said, M.Y. & Wargute, P. (2000) Wildlife and livestock population trends in the Kenya rangeland. In: Wildlife Conservation by Sustainable Use, ed. Prins, H.H.T., Grootenhuis, J.G. & Dolan, T.T., pp. 203218. Boston, CT, USA: Kluwer Academic Publishers.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parry, D. & Campbell, B. (1992) Attitudes of rural communities to animal wildlife and its utilisation in Chobe Enclave and Mababe Depression, Botswana. Environmental Conservation 19: 245252.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prins, H.H.T. (2000) Competition between wildlife and livestock in Africa. In: Wildlife Conservation by Sustainable Use, ed. Prins, H.H.T., Grootenhuis, J.G. & Dolan, T.T., pp. 5180. Boston, CT, USA: Kluwer Academic Publishers.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robson, C. (2002) Real World Research: a Resource for Social Scientists and Practitioner-researchers. Second edition. Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing Ltd.Google Scholar
Sombroek, W.C., Braun, H.M.H. & Van Der Pouw, B.J.A. (1982) Explanatory soil map and agro-climatic zone map of Kenya. Report E1. National Agricultural Laboratories, Soil Survey Unit, Nairobi, Kenya.Google Scholar
Sutton, W.R., Larson, D.M. & Jarvis, L.S. (2004) A new approach for assessing the costs of living with wildlife in developing countries. UC Davis Agricultural and Resource Economics Working Paper no. 04-001 [wwwdocument]. URL http://ssrn.com/abstract=525582CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, D.M. & Homewood, K. (2002) Entrepreneurs, elites, and exclusion in Maasailand: trends in wildlife conservation and pastoral development. Human Ecology 30: 107137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weladji, R.B., Moe, S.R. & Vedeld, P. (2003) Stakeholder attitudes towards wildlife policy and the Bénoué Wildlife Conservation Area, North Cameroon. Environmental Conservation 30: 334343.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Western, D. (1973) The structure, dynamics and changes of the Amboseli Ecosystem. Ph.D. thesis, University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya.Google Scholar
Western, D. & Wright, R.M. (1994) The background to community based conservation. In: Natural Connections: Perspectives in Community-based Conservation., ed. Western, D. and Wright, R.M., pp. 114. Washington DC, USA: Island Press.Google Scholar
White, P.C.L., Vaughan Jennings, N., Renwick, A.R. & Barker, N.H.L. (2005) Questionnaires in ecology: a review of past use and recommendations for best practice. Journal of Applied Ecology 42: 421430.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Worden, J., Reid, R. & Gichohi, H. (2003) Land-use impacts on large wildlife and livestock in the swamps of the greater Amboseli ecosystem, Kajiado District, Kenya. Lucid Project, International Livestock Research Institute, Nairobi, Kenya.Google Scholar
Zimmerman, A., Walpole, M.J. & Leader-Williams, N. (2005) Cattle ranchers' attitudes to conflicts with jaguar Panthera onca in the Pantanal of Brazil. Oryx 39: 406412.CrossRefGoogle Scholar