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1.
Conserv Biol ; 33(3): 612-622, 2019 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30306633

RESUMEN

Management activities such as law enforcement and community outreach are thought to affect conservation outcomes in protected areas, but their importance relative to intrinsic environmental characteristics of the parks and extrinsic human pressures surrounding the parks have not been explored. Furthermore, it is not clear which is more related to conservation outcomes-the management itself or local people's perceptions of the management. We measured objective (reports by park staff) and subjective (reports by local people) levels of community outreach and law enforcement based on responses to 374 questionnaires. We estimated mammal abundance and diversity of 6 protected areas based on data from 115 camera traps in Xishuangbanna, southwest China, a biodiversity hotspot with high hunting and land-conversion pressures. We then examined correlations among them and found that local people's perception of law enforcement was positively related to the local abundance of 2 large, hunted species, wild boar (Sus scrofa) (ß = 15.22) and muntjac (Muntiacus vaginalis) (ß = 14.82), but not related to the abundance of smaller mammals or to objective levels of enforcement. The subjective frequency of outreach by park staff to local communities (ß = 3.42) and park size (ß = 3.28) were significantly and positively related to mammal species richness, whereas elevation, human population density, and subjective frequency of law enforcement were not. We could not conclude that community outreach and law enforcement were directly causing increased mammal abundance and diversity. Nevertheless, the patterns we detected are some of the first empirical evidence consistent with the idea that biodiversity in protected areas may be more positively and strongly related to local perceptions of the intensity of park management than to either intrinsic (e.g., elevation, park size) or extrinsic (e.g., human population density) environmental factors.


Efectos de la Aplicación de la Ley y la Participación de la Comunidad sobre la Diversidad de Mamíferos en un Punto Caliente de Biodiversidad Resumen Las actividades de manejo como la aplicación de la ley y la participación de la comunidad afectan los resultados de conservación dentro de las áreas protegidas, pero su importancia en relación con las características ambientales intrínsecas de los parques y las presiones humanas extrínsecas que rodean a los parques no han sido exploradas. Además, no está claro cuál está más relacionado con los resultados de conservación - el manejo en sí o las percepciones que las personas locales tienen sobre el manejo. Medimos los niveles objetivos (reportes dados por el personal del parque) y subjetivos (reportes dados por los locales) de la participación de la comunidad y la aplicación de la ley con base en las respuestas a 347 cuestionarios. Estimamos la abundancia y diversidad de mamíferos de seis áreas protegidas con base en datos de 115 cámaras trampa en Xishuangbann, al suroeste de China, un punto caliente de biodiversidad con altas presiones causadas por la caza y la conversión del uso de suelo. Después examinamos la correlación entre ellos y encontramos que la percepción que los locales tienen sobre la aplicación de la ley estuvo relacionada positivamente con la abundancia local de dos grandes especies que son cazadas, el jabalí (Sus scrofa) (ß = 15.22) y el muntíaco (Muntiacus vaginalis) (ß = 14.82), pero no estuvo relacionada con la abundancia de mamíferos más pequeños o con los niveles objetivos de la aplicación de la ley. La frecuencia subjetiva del alcance del personal del parque hacia las comunidades locales (ß = 3.42) y el tamaño del parque and (ß = 3.28) estuvieron relacionadas significativa y positivamente con la riqueza de las especies de mamíferos, mientras que la elevación, la densidad de la población humana, y la frecuencia subjetiva de la aplicación de la ley no lo estuvieron. No pudimos concluir que la participación de la comunidad y la aplicación de la ley estuvieran causando directamente una abundancia y diversidad aumentada de mamíferos. Sin embargo, los patrones que detectamos son de las primeras evidencias empíricas consistentes con la idea de que la biodiversidad en las áreas protegidas podría estar relacionada positiva y fuertemente con la percepción que tienen los locales de la intensidad del manejo del parque y no con los factores ambientales intrínsecos (p. ej.: elevación, tamaño del parque) o extrínsecos (p.ej.: densidad de la población humana).


Asunto(s)
Conservación de los Recursos Naturales , Aplicación de la Ley , Animales , Biodiversidad , China , Relaciones Comunidad-Institución , Humanos , Mamíferos
2.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 6404, 2017 08 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28775252

RESUMEN

Over the last 4 decades, China has undergone major economic development, resulting in considerable impacts on its wildlife populations and habitats. It is essential to quantify the conflict between development and conservation to assist with policy-making because forestry policies and market trends affected indirectly the distribution of Asian elephants. Here, we mapped the historical distribution of elephants versus human land use. Elephant distributions appear to occur in unbroken natural forests only. However, over the 40-year period, the distribution ranges have become smaller and fragmented, with natural forest area also declining by 16%. The monoculture of cash trees is encroaching on natural forests. Over the past 10 years, rubber plantations have become concentrated in the south, with extensive natural forests and scattered rubber farms being converted to tea plantations, due to changes in governmental policies and product prices. Through mapping the spatial changes in the distribution of rubber and tea plantations, our study is expected to help local managers to incorporate the needs of endangered elephants through creating space when planning plantations, especially in Xishuangbanna and the south part of Pu'er. In conclusion, restoring elephant habitat and establishing ecological corridors are critical for the survival of elephants in this region.


Asunto(s)
Conservación de los Recursos Naturales/métodos , Elefantes/fisiología , Animales , Animales Salvajes/fisiología , China , Productos Agrícolas/crecimiento & desarrollo , Demografía , Bosques , Humanos
3.
Conserv Biol ; 29(6): 1563-72, 2015 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26372504

RESUMEN

Xishuangbanna is on the northern margins of tropical Asia in southwestern China and has the largest area of tropical forest remaining in the country. It is in the Indo-Burma hotspot and contains 16% of China's vascular flora in <0.2% of the country's total area (19,690 km(2) ). Rapid expansion of monoculture crops in the last 20 years, particularly rubber, threatens this region's exceptional biodiversity. To understand the effects of land-use change and collection on orchid species diversity and determine protection priorities, we conducted systematic field surveys, observed markets, interviewed orchid collectors, and then determined the conservation status of all orchids. We identified 426 orchid species in 115 genera in Xishuangbanna: 31% of all orchid species that occur in China. Species richness was highest at 1000-1200 m elevation. Three orchid species were assessed as possibly extinct in the wild, 15 as critically endangered, 82 as endangered, 124 as vulnerable, 186 as least concern, and 16 as data deficient. Declines over 20 years in harvested species suggested over-collection was the major threat, and utility value (i.e., medicinal or ornamental value) was significantly related to endangerment. Expansion of rubber tree plantations was less of a threat to orchids than to other taxa because only 75 orchid species (17.6%) occurred below the 1000-m-elevation ceiling for rubber cultivation, and most of these (46) occurred in nature reserves. However, climate change is projected to lift this ceiling to around 1300 m by 2050, and the limited area at higher elevations reduces the potential for upslope range expansion. The Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden is committed to achieving zero plant extinctions in Xishuangbanna, and orchids are a high priority. Appropriate in and ex situ conservation strategies, including new protected areas and seed banking, have been developed for every threatened orchid species and are being implemented.


Asunto(s)
Biodiversidad , Conservación de los Recursos Naturales , Especies en Peligro de Extinción , Orchidaceae/fisiología , China
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