Disentangling economic, cultural, and nutritional motives to identify entry points for regulating a wildlife commodity chain

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Disentangling economic, cultural, and nutritional motives to identify entry points for regulating a wildlife commodity chain. / Bachmann, Mona Estrella; Junker, Jessica; Mundry, Roger; Nielsen, Martin Reinhardt; Haase, Dagmar; Cohen, Heather; Kouassi, Joseph A.K.; Kühl, Hjalmar S.

In: Biological Conservation, Vol. 238, 108177, 2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bachmann, ME, Junker, J, Mundry, R, Nielsen, MR, Haase, D, Cohen, H, Kouassi, JAK & Kühl, HS 2019, 'Disentangling economic, cultural, and nutritional motives to identify entry points for regulating a wildlife commodity chain', Biological Conservation, vol. 238, 108177. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2019.07.022

APA

Bachmann, M. E., Junker, J., Mundry, R., Nielsen, M. R., Haase, D., Cohen, H., Kouassi, J. A. K., & Kühl, H. S. (2019). Disentangling economic, cultural, and nutritional motives to identify entry points for regulating a wildlife commodity chain. Biological Conservation, 238, [108177]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2019.07.022

Vancouver

Bachmann ME, Junker J, Mundry R, Nielsen MR, Haase D, Cohen H et al. Disentangling economic, cultural, and nutritional motives to identify entry points for regulating a wildlife commodity chain. Biological Conservation. 2019;238. 108177. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2019.07.022

Author

Bachmann, Mona Estrella ; Junker, Jessica ; Mundry, Roger ; Nielsen, Martin Reinhardt ; Haase, Dagmar ; Cohen, Heather ; Kouassi, Joseph A.K. ; Kühl, Hjalmar S. / Disentangling economic, cultural, and nutritional motives to identify entry points for regulating a wildlife commodity chain. In: Biological Conservation. 2019 ; Vol. 238.

Bibtex

@article{ded17befeaed481b9027b02161d374de,
title = "Disentangling economic, cultural, and nutritional motives to identify entry points for regulating a wildlife commodity chain",
abstract = "Development of reduction policies for products risking the health or the environment usually begins with the question of whether the most promising entry point is reducing production, distribution or consumption. We aim to answer this crucial question for bushmeat, a wildlife product whose unsustainable harvest threatens biodiversity and food security. We collected one of the largest data sets available on bushmeat commodity chains by interviewing 348 hunters, 202 bushmeat traders, 190 restaurant owners, and 985 consumers in 47 urban and rural settlements around Ta{\"i} National Park, C{\^o}te d'Ivoire. We examined 1) structural traits by network analyses and 2) disentangled the underlying economic, cultural, and nutritional motives for bushmeat utilization at the level of production (hunters), distribution (bushmeat traders), and consumption (households). We found that while economic drivers determined hunting, trading was associated with economic and cultural drivers and consumption was purely influenced by cultural habits. Bushmeat traders were promising candidates for effective regulation interventions, but held a small market share and the risk of displacement to other trading channels remains. Since cultural motives for consumption provide a key opportunity for large-scale behavioral changes, we propose consumers as the most effective point of entry for interventions. However, any such consumer level intervention should be supported by programs providing the remaining commodity chain actors with alternative livelihoods. Generally, interventions into the complex social-ecological system of wildlife commodity chains must consider interdependencies and require multi-actor approaches and monitoring to avoid displacement and diffusion effects and to guarantee a socially and ecologically sustainable change.",
keywords = "Bushmeat, Conservation, Drivers, West Africa, Wildlife management, Wildlife trade",
author = "Bachmann, {Mona Estrella} and Jessica Junker and Roger Mundry and Nielsen, {Martin Reinhardt} and Dagmar Haase and Heather Cohen and Kouassi, {Joseph A.K.} and K{\"u}hl, {Hjalmar S.}",
year = "2019",
doi = "10.1016/j.biocon.2019.07.022",
language = "English",
volume = "238",
journal = "Biological Conservation",
issn = "0006-3207",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Disentangling economic, cultural, and nutritional motives to identify entry points for regulating a wildlife commodity chain

AU - Bachmann, Mona Estrella

AU - Junker, Jessica

AU - Mundry, Roger

AU - Nielsen, Martin Reinhardt

AU - Haase, Dagmar

AU - Cohen, Heather

AU - Kouassi, Joseph A.K.

AU - Kühl, Hjalmar S.

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Development of reduction policies for products risking the health or the environment usually begins with the question of whether the most promising entry point is reducing production, distribution or consumption. We aim to answer this crucial question for bushmeat, a wildlife product whose unsustainable harvest threatens biodiversity and food security. We collected one of the largest data sets available on bushmeat commodity chains by interviewing 348 hunters, 202 bushmeat traders, 190 restaurant owners, and 985 consumers in 47 urban and rural settlements around Taï National Park, Côte d'Ivoire. We examined 1) structural traits by network analyses and 2) disentangled the underlying economic, cultural, and nutritional motives for bushmeat utilization at the level of production (hunters), distribution (bushmeat traders), and consumption (households). We found that while economic drivers determined hunting, trading was associated with economic and cultural drivers and consumption was purely influenced by cultural habits. Bushmeat traders were promising candidates for effective regulation interventions, but held a small market share and the risk of displacement to other trading channels remains. Since cultural motives for consumption provide a key opportunity for large-scale behavioral changes, we propose consumers as the most effective point of entry for interventions. However, any such consumer level intervention should be supported by programs providing the remaining commodity chain actors with alternative livelihoods. Generally, interventions into the complex social-ecological system of wildlife commodity chains must consider interdependencies and require multi-actor approaches and monitoring to avoid displacement and diffusion effects and to guarantee a socially and ecologically sustainable change.

AB - Development of reduction policies for products risking the health or the environment usually begins with the question of whether the most promising entry point is reducing production, distribution or consumption. We aim to answer this crucial question for bushmeat, a wildlife product whose unsustainable harvest threatens biodiversity and food security. We collected one of the largest data sets available on bushmeat commodity chains by interviewing 348 hunters, 202 bushmeat traders, 190 restaurant owners, and 985 consumers in 47 urban and rural settlements around Taï National Park, Côte d'Ivoire. We examined 1) structural traits by network analyses and 2) disentangled the underlying economic, cultural, and nutritional motives for bushmeat utilization at the level of production (hunters), distribution (bushmeat traders), and consumption (households). We found that while economic drivers determined hunting, trading was associated with economic and cultural drivers and consumption was purely influenced by cultural habits. Bushmeat traders were promising candidates for effective regulation interventions, but held a small market share and the risk of displacement to other trading channels remains. Since cultural motives for consumption provide a key opportunity for large-scale behavioral changes, we propose consumers as the most effective point of entry for interventions. However, any such consumer level intervention should be supported by programs providing the remaining commodity chain actors with alternative livelihoods. Generally, interventions into the complex social-ecological system of wildlife commodity chains must consider interdependencies and require multi-actor approaches and monitoring to avoid displacement and diffusion effects and to guarantee a socially and ecologically sustainable change.

KW - Bushmeat

KW - Conservation

KW - Drivers

KW - West Africa

KW - Wildlife management

KW - Wildlife trade

U2 - 10.1016/j.biocon.2019.07.022

DO - 10.1016/j.biocon.2019.07.022

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85071005283

VL - 238

JO - Biological Conservation

JF - Biological Conservation

SN - 0006-3207

M1 - 108177

ER -

ID: 226878212