Human-Wildlife Conflict in and Around Borena Sayint National Park, Northern Ethiopia

We identified causes, impact, and traditional management measures of human– wildlife conflict (HWC) in and around Borena Sayint National Park, Ethiopia. We employed questionnaires, focus group discussions, direct observations, and key informant interviews to collect data. The respondents perceived a...

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Main Authors: Ayenew Biset, Girma Mengesha, Zerihun Girma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Utah State University 2019-05-01
Series:Human-Wildlife Interactions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol13/iss1/15
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spelling doaj-b793db233dad4805a6e7e8905a6b3b812020-11-25T03:50:06ZengUtah State UniversityHuman-Wildlife Interactions2155-38742155-38742019-05-0113110.26076/fk60-mp27Human-Wildlife Conflict in and Around Borena Sayint National Park, Northern EthiopiaAyenew Biset0Girma Mengesha1Zerihun Girma2Hawassa UniversityHawassa UniversityHawassa UniversityWe identified causes, impact, and traditional management measures of human– wildlife conflict (HWC) in and around Borena Sayint National Park, Ethiopia. We employed questionnaires, focus group discussions, direct observations, and key informant interviews to collect data. The respondents perceived an increase in the number of wildlife population (56 respondents; 42.4%) followed by human proximity to park areas (44 respondents; 33.3%) as the main causes of HWC. The respondents perceived leopards (Panthera pardus) and spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) among the top livestock depredators while grivet monkeys (Cercopethicus aethiops) and porcupines (Hystrix cristata) were perceived as notorious crop raiders. Gelada baboons (Theropithecus gelada) were identified as both crop raiding and livestock depredator wildlife species. A majority of the respondents (113; 85.6%) perceived both crop and livestock damage as impact of wildlife on humans. Guarding was reported as the main traditional measure of conflict management. The incidents have caused economic loss to the livelihood of the local community and have adverse impacts on wildlife conservation. We recommend community-based ecotourism to mitigate the conflict. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol13/iss1/15crop raiderslivestock depredatorstraditional measures
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ayenew Biset
Girma Mengesha
Zerihun Girma
spellingShingle Ayenew Biset
Girma Mengesha
Zerihun Girma
Human-Wildlife Conflict in and Around Borena Sayint National Park, Northern Ethiopia
Human-Wildlife Interactions
crop raiders
livestock depredators
traditional measures
author_facet Ayenew Biset
Girma Mengesha
Zerihun Girma
author_sort Ayenew Biset
title Human-Wildlife Conflict in and Around Borena Sayint National Park, Northern Ethiopia
title_short Human-Wildlife Conflict in and Around Borena Sayint National Park, Northern Ethiopia
title_full Human-Wildlife Conflict in and Around Borena Sayint National Park, Northern Ethiopia
title_fullStr Human-Wildlife Conflict in and Around Borena Sayint National Park, Northern Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Human-Wildlife Conflict in and Around Borena Sayint National Park, Northern Ethiopia
title_sort human-wildlife conflict in and around borena sayint national park, northern ethiopia
publisher Utah State University
series Human-Wildlife Interactions
issn 2155-3874
2155-3874
publishDate 2019-05-01
description We identified causes, impact, and traditional management measures of human– wildlife conflict (HWC) in and around Borena Sayint National Park, Ethiopia. We employed questionnaires, focus group discussions, direct observations, and key informant interviews to collect data. The respondents perceived an increase in the number of wildlife population (56 respondents; 42.4%) followed by human proximity to park areas (44 respondents; 33.3%) as the main causes of HWC. The respondents perceived leopards (Panthera pardus) and spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) among the top livestock depredators while grivet monkeys (Cercopethicus aethiops) and porcupines (Hystrix cristata) were perceived as notorious crop raiders. Gelada baboons (Theropithecus gelada) were identified as both crop raiding and livestock depredator wildlife species. A majority of the respondents (113; 85.6%) perceived both crop and livestock damage as impact of wildlife on humans. Guarding was reported as the main traditional measure of conflict management. The incidents have caused economic loss to the livelihood of the local community and have adverse impacts on wildlife conservation. We recommend community-based ecotourism to mitigate the conflict.
topic crop raiders
livestock depredators
traditional measures
url https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/hwi/vol13/iss1/15
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AT zerihungirma humanwildlifeconflictinandaroundborenasayintnationalparknorthernethiopia
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