
Indexado en
Licencia y uso

Grant support
This study was supported by Universidad Politecnica de Madrid-Funded Research, Development and Innovation Programme (specifically the Funding for predoctoral contracts for the completion of doctoral degrees at UPM schools, faculties, and R&D centers) and project RTI2018-096348-R-C21 funded by Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation.
Let Us Give Voice to Local Farmers: Preferences for Farm-Based Strategies to Enhance Human-Elephant Coexistence in Africa
Publicado en:Animals. 12 (14): 1867- - 2022-01-01 12(14), DOI: 10.3390/ani12141867
Autores: Botey, Maria Montero; Solino, Mario; Perea, Ramon; Martinez-Jauregui, Maria;
Afiliaciones
Resumen
Simple Summary Local communities living on the edge of protected areas often experience negative impacts on their livelihoods due to wildlife. These situations threaten support for long-term conservation of wildlife and wild habitats so a key for conservation sustainability should be based on implementing socially accepted and economically sustainable mitigation practices. For successful design and implementation of mitigation strategies, it is vital to engage local communities and understand their preferences and previous experiences. In this study, we present a choice experiment as a tool to analyze local farmer preferences for the most common farm-based solutions to reduce African elephant crop damage. Results show that there are significant differences among responses triggered by farmers' previous experience with elephants and socioeconomic situation, with a marked spatial distribution among respondents. This methodology, based on a choice modeling approach considering the differential availability of resources and previous experience with elephants or other wildlife, is highly applicable, with small changes in other areas where wildlife competes with local communities for resources. This approach also represents a suitable instrument for identifying stakeholders' preferences in each specific context. Local communities surrounding wildlife corridors and natural reserves often face challenges related to human-wildlife coexistence. To mitigate the challenges and ensure the long-term conservation of wildlife, it is important to engage local communities in the design of conservation strategies. By conducting 480 face-to-face interviews in 30 villages along and adjacent to the Selous-Niassa Wildlife Corridor (Tanzania), we quantified farmers' preferences for farm-based measures to mitigate African elephant damage using choice experiments. Results show that farmers considered no action the least preferred option, revealing that they are open to trying different measures. The most preferred management strategy matched with the preferences of wildlife rangers in the area, suggesting low concern about the potential conflicts between stakeholders. However, a latent class model suggests that there are significant differences among responses triggered by farmers' previous experience with elephants, the intensity of the elephant damage, and the socioeconomic situation of the farmer. Results show a marked spatial distribution among respondents, highlighting the benefits of zone management as conflicts were found to be highly context dependent. Understanding the human dimension of conservation is essential for the successful planification and implementation of conservation strategies. Therefore, the development and broad utilization of methodologies to gather specific context information should be encouraged.
Palabras clave
Indicios de calidad
Impacto bibliométrico. Análisis de la aportación y canal de difusión
El trabajo ha sido publicado en la revista Animals debido a la progresión y el buen impacto que ha alcanzado en los últimos años, según la agencia WoS (JCR), se ha convertido en una referencia en su campo. En el año de publicación del trabajo, 2022, se encontraba en la posición 13/144, consiguiendo con ello situarse como revista Q1 (Primer Cuartil), en la categoría Veterinary Sciences. Destacable, igualmente, el hecho de que la Revista está posicionada por encima del Percentil 90.
Desde una perspectiva relativa, y atendiendo al indicador del impacto normalizado calculado a partir de las Citas Mundiales de Scopus Elsevier, arroja un valor para la media Ponderada del Impacto Normalizado de la agencia Scopus: 1.13, lo que indica que, de manera comparada con trabajos en la misma disciplina y en el mismo año de publicación, lo ubica como trabajo citado por encima de la media. (fuente consultada: ESI 14 Nov 2024)
Esta información viene reforzada por otros indicadores del mismo tipo, que aunque dinámicos en el tiempo y dependientes del conjunto de citaciones medias mundiales en el momento de su cálculo, coinciden en posicionar en algún momento al trabajo, entre el 50% más citados dentro de su temática:
- Field Citation Ratio (FCR) de la fuente Dimensions: 4.63 (fuente consultada: Dimensions Jul 2025)
De manera concreta y atendiendo a las diferentes agencias de indexación, el trabajo ha acumulado, hasta la fecha 2025-07-05, el siguiente número de citas:
- WoS: 1
- Scopus: 6
Impacto y visibilidad social
Análisis de liderazgo de los autores institucionales
Existe un liderazgo significativo ya que algunos de los autores pertenecientes a la institución aparecen como primer o último firmante, se puede apreciar en el detalle: Primer Autor (MONTERO BOTEY, MARIA) .
el autor responsable de establecer las labores de correspondencia ha sido MONTERO BOTEY, MARIA.