Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-p9bg8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T05:24:48.090Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Relationship between rural depopulation and puma-human conflict in the high Andes of Chile

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 August 2015

OMAR OHRENS*
Affiliation:
Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies, University of Wisconsin, 550 North Park Street, Madison, WI 53706, USA Fauna Australis Wildlife Laboratory, Department of Ecosystem and the Environment, School of Agriculture and Forestry Engineering, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Vicuña Mackenna 4860, PO Box 306–22, Macul, Santiago, Chile
ADRIAN TREVES
Affiliation:
Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies, University of Wisconsin, 550 North Park Street, Madison, WI 53706, USA
CRISTIÁN BONACIC
Affiliation:
Fauna Australis Wildlife Laboratory, Department of Ecosystem and the Environment, School of Agriculture and Forestry Engineering, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Vicuña Mackenna 4860, PO Box 306–22, Macul, Santiago, Chile Interdisciplinary Center for Intercultural and Indigenous Studies, Institute of Sociology, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Vicuña Mackenna 4860, PO Box 306–22, Macul, Santiago, Chile
*
*Correspondence: Omar Ohrens Tel: +1 518 3534835 e-mail: ohrens@wisc.edu

Summary

Rural depopulation has different effects on biodiversity and ecosystems in many regions of the world. For large carnivores such as pumas (Puma concolor) the effects are uncertain. An analysis of relationships between patterns of rural depopulation and perceptions of the risk posed by pumas among Aymara people in the altiplano region of Chile examined perceived risk, as well as self-reported losses, in relation to livestock husbandry, sociodemographic variables (age, household size, and residency status), and reported self-sufficiency. There was no evidence that rural depopulation elevated perceived risk, or the level of self-reported losses of livestock blamed on pumas. Indeed, many respondents, including older respondents and those with smaller households, reported a decline in perceived risk over the preceding five years. These perceptions of risk were not associated with self-reported losses to pumas in the previous year. An increase in perceived risk was associated with the use of guards for livestock, suggesting livestock owners accommodated their absences from herds by using guards. Absolute numbers of livestock lost increased with the distance from households to where livestock were grazed or gave birth. A cost-effective verification system for puma attacks is recommended, and further human dimensions research is required to identify the owners who complained and the costs and benefits of different wildlife species. Further interventions to prevent either livestock losses or retaliation against pumas can then be targeted more precisely.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 2015 

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

Acebes, P., Traba, J. & Malo, J.E. (2012) Co-occurrence and potential for competition between wild and domestic large herbivores in a South American desert. Journal of Arid Environments 77: 3944.Google Scholar
Amar, M.F. (2008) Evaluación económica, ecológica y socio-cultural del conflicto de depredación de ganado doméstico por la especie Puma concolor (Linnaeus 1771) en las comunas de San José de Maipo y Putre, Chile. MSc thesis, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile.Google Scholar
Archabald, K. & Naughton-Treves, L. (2001) Tourism revenue sharing around national parks in western Uganda: early efforts to identify and reward local communities. Environmental Conservation 23: 135149.Google Scholar
Bergstrom, B.L., Arias, L.C., Davidson, A.D., Ferguson, A.W., Randa, L.A. & Sheffield, S.R. (2014) License to kill: reforming federal wildlife control to restore biodiversity and ecosystem function. Conservation Letters 7: 131142.Google Scholar
Blanco-Fontao, B., Quevedo, M. & Obeso, J.R. (2011) Abandonment of traditional uses in mountain areas: typological thinking versus hard data in the Cantabrian Mountains (NW Spain). Biodiversity Conservation 20: 11331140.Google Scholar
Bonacic, C., Ibarra, T., Amar, M.F., Sanhueza, D., Guarda, N., Gálvez, N. & Murphy, T. (2007) Informe técnico final proyecto ‘Evaluación del conflicto entre carnívoros silvestres y ganadería’. Report. Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero, Santiago, Chile.Google Scholar
Bonino, N., Cossios, D. & Menegheti, J. (2010) Dispersal of the European hare, Lepus europaeus in South America. Folia Zoologica 59 (1): 915.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruskotter, J.M. & Wilson, R.S. (2014) Determining where the wild things will be: using psychological theory to find tolerance for large carnivores. Conservation Letters 7 (3): 158165.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Caqueo-Urízar, A., Urzúa, A. & De Munter, K. (2014). Mental health of indigenous school children in Northern Chile. BMC Psychiatry 14: 11.Google Scholar
Cattan, P., Iriarte, J.A., Johnson, W. & Villalobos, R. (2006) Informe final ‘Diagnóstico del estado poblacional del puma y su interrelación con la ganadería del altiplano de la región de Tarapacá, Chile’. Report. Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero, Santiago, Chile.Google Scholar
Cattan, P., Acosta, G., Cundhill, G., Correa, P., Cortés, G. & Rojo, G. (2010) Informe final ‘Evaluación de la interacción entre el puma (Puma concolor) y la ganadería en la provincia de Choapa, Región de Coquimbo’. Report. Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero, Santiago, Chile.Google Scholar
Cocca, G., Sturaro, E., Gallo, L. & Ramazin, M. (2012) Is the abandonment of traditional livestock farming systems the main driver of mountain landscape change in Alpine areas. Land Use Policy 29: 787886.Google Scholar
Conforti, V.A. & De Azevedo, F.C.C. (2003) Local perceptions of jaguars (Panthera onca) and pumas (Puma concolor) in the Iguacu National Park area, south Brazil. Biological Conservation 111: 215221.Google Scholar
Davie, H.S., Murdoch, J.D., Lhagvasuren, A. & Reading, R.B. (2014) Measuring and mapping the influence of landscape factors on livestock predation by wolves in Mongolia. Journal of Arid Environments 103: 8591.Google Scholar
Dickman, A., Marchini, S. & Manfredo, M. (2013) The human dimension in addressing conflict with large carnivores. In: Key Topics in Conservation Biology 2, ed. Macdonald, D. & Willis, K.J., pp. 110128. London, UK: John Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Enserink, M. & Vogel, G. (2006) The carnivore comeback. Science 314: 746749.Google Scholar
Estes, J.A., Terborgh, J., Brashares, J.S., Power, M.E., Berger, J., Bond, W.J., Carpenter, S.R., Essington, T.E., Holt, R.D., Jackson, J.B.C. et al. (2011) Trophic downgrading of planet Earth. Science 333: 301306.Google Scholar
Frank, L.G., Woodroffe, R. & Ogada, M.O. (2005) People and predators in Laikipia District, Kenya. In: People and Wildlife: Conflict or Coexistence?, ed. Woodroffe, R., Thirgood, S. & Rabinowitz, A., pp. 286304. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Franklin, W.L., Johnson, W.E., Sarno, R.J. & Iriarte, J.A. (1999) Ecology of the Patagonia puma (Felis concolor patagonica) in southern Chile. Biological Conservation 90: 3340.Google Scholar
Fernández, M. & Salinas, J. (2012) Defensa de los derechos territoriales en Latinoamérica. Santiago, Chile: Ril editores.Google Scholar
Gavilán, V. (2002) ‘Buscando vida. . .’: hacia una teoría aymara de la division del trabajo por género. Revista Chungará 34: 101117.Google Scholar
Goodrich, J.M., Kerley, L.L., Smirnov, E.N., Miquelle, D.G., McDonald, L., Quigley, H.B., Hornocker, M.G. & McDonald, T. (2008) Survival rates and causes of mortality of Amur tigers on and near the Sikhote-Alin Biosphere Zapovednik. Journal of Zoology 276: 323329.Google Scholar
Grau, H.R. & Aide, T.M. (2007) Are rural-urban migration and sustainable development compatible in mountain systems? Mountain Research and Development 27 (2): 119123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grebe, M.E. (1986) Migración, identidad y cultura aymará: Puntos de vista del actor. Revista Chungará 16–17: 205223.Google Scholar
Gundermann, H. (1984) Ganadería Aymara, ecología y forrajes: evaluación regional de una actividad productiva. Revista Chungará 12: 99124.Google Scholar
Gundermann, H. (1998) Pastoralismo andino y transformaciones sociales en el norte de Chile. Estudios Atacameños 16: 293311.Google Scholar
Gundermann, H. & González, H. (2008) Pautas de integración regional, movilidad y redes sociales en los pueblos Indígenas de Chile. Revista UNIVERSUM 23: 82115.Google Scholar
Hill, C.M. (1998) Conflicting attitudes towards elephants around the Budongo Forest Reserve, Uganda. Environmental Conservation 25: 244250.Google Scholar
Holmern, T., Nyahongo, J. & Røskaft, E. (2007) Livestock loss caused by predators outside the Serengeti National Park, Tanzania. Biological Conservation 135: 518526.Google Scholar
INE (2002) Censo de vivienda y población 2002. Instituto Nacional de Estadísticas, Chile.Google Scholar
INE (2008) Población y sociedad: aspectos demográficos. Instituto Nacional de Estadísticas, Chile.Google Scholar
Iriarte, J.A. (2010) Informe final ‘Diagnóstico del estado poblacional del puma (Puma concolor) y evaluación de la efectividad de corrales para proteger el ganado doméstico en la Araucanía’. Report. Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero, Santiago, Chile.Google Scholar
Iriarte, J.A. (2011) Informe final ‘Diagnóstico del estado poblacional del puma (Puma concolor) y evaluación de la efectividad de corrales para proteger el ganado doméstico en la Provincia de Parinacota’. Report. Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero, Santiago, Chile.Google Scholar
Iriarte, J.A. (2012) Informe final ‘Diagnóstico del estado poblacional del puma (Puma concolor) y evaluación de la efectividad de corrales para proteger el ganado domástico en la Araucanía’. Report. Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero, Santiago, Chile.Google Scholar
Johnson, W.E. & Franklin, W.L. (1994) Role of body size in the diets of sympatric gray and culpeo foxes. Journal of Mammalogy 75 (1): 163174.Google Scholar
Knight, J. (2000) Introduction. In: Natural Enemies: People-Wildlife Conflicts in Anthropological Perspective, ed. Knight, J., pp. 135. London, UK: Routledge.Google Scholar
Knight, J. (2003) Waiting for Wolves in Japan. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Laundré, J.W. & Hernández, L. (2010) What we know about pumas in Latin America. In: Cougar: Ecology and Conservation, ed. Hornocker, M. & Negri, S., pp. 7690. Chicago, IL, USA: The University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Lescureux, N. & Linnell, J.D.C. (2013) The effect of rapid social changes during post-communist transition on perceptions of the human-wolf relationships in Macedonia and Kyrgyzstan. Pastoralism: Research, Policy and Practice 3.Google Scholar
Liberg, O., Chapron, G., Wabakken, P., Pedersen, H.C., Hobbs, N.T. & Sand, H.K. (2011) Shoot, shovel and shut up: cryptic poaching slows restoration of a large carnivore in Europe. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B 270: 9198.Google Scholar
López-Bao, J.V., Sazatornil, V., Llaneza, L. & Rodríguez, A. (2013) Indirect effects on heathland conservation and wolf persistence of contradictory policies that threaten traditional free-ranging horse husbandry. Conservation Letters 6 (6): 448455.Google Scholar
Lucherini, M. & Merino, M.J. (2008) Perceptions of human–carnivore conflicts in the High Andes of Argentina. Mountain Research and Development 28 (1): 8185.Google Scholar
Lucherini, M., Ríos, L., Manfredi, C., Merino, M.J. & Arellano, J. (2008) Human-puma conflicts in three areas from the southern cone of South America: preliminary data. Cat News 49: 2930.Google Scholar
MacDonald, D., Crabtree, J.L., Wiesinger, G., Dax, T., Stamou, N., Fleury, P., Gutiérrez Lazpita, J. & Gibon, A. (2000) Agricultural abandonment in mountain areas of Europe: environmental consequences and policy response. Journal of Environmental Management 59: 4769.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marchini, S. & Macdonald, D.W. (2012) Predicting ranchers’ intention to kill jaguars: case studies in Amazonia and Pantanal. Biological Conservation 147: 213221.Google Scholar
Mertens, A. & Promberger, C. (2001) Economic aspects of large carnivore-livestock conflicts in Romania. Ursus 12: 173180.Google Scholar
Michalski, F., Bouhlosa, R.L.P., Faria, A. & Peres, C.A. (2006) Human–wildlife conflicts in a fragmented Amazonian forest landscape: determinants of large felid depredation on livestock. Animal Conservation 9: 179188.Google Scholar
Mishra, C. (1997) Livestock depredation by large carnivore in the Indian trans-Himalaya: conflict perceptions and conservation prospects. Environmental Conservation 24 (4): 338343.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murphy, T. & Macdonald, D.W. (2010) People and pumas: lessons in the landscape of tolerance from a widely distributed felid. In: The Biology and Conservation of Wild Felids, ed. Macdonald, D. & Loveridge, A., pp. 431451. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Montag, J. (2003) Compensation and predator conservation: limitations of compensation. Carnivore Damage Prevention News 6: 26.Google Scholar
Moreno, X.S. (2011) Modificación de los manejos pastoriles de las comunidades aymaras del Salar de Huasco y Lirima (Región de Tarapacá). MSc thesis. Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile.Google Scholar
Naughton-Treves, L. (1997) Farming the forest edge: vulnerable places and people around Kibale National Park, Uganda. Geographical Review 87: 2746.Google Scholar
Naughton-Treves, L. (1998) Predicting patterns of crop damage by wildlife around Kibale National Park, Uganda. Conservation Biology 12 (1): 156168.Google Scholar
Naughton-Treves, L. & Treves, A. (2005) Socio-ecological factors shaping local support for wildlife: crop-raiding by elephants and other wildlife in Africa. In: People and Wildlife: Conflict or Coexistence?, ed. Woodroffe, R., Thirgood, S. & Rabinowitz, A., pp. 252277. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Naughton-Treves, L., Grossberg, R. & Treves, A. (2003) Paying for tolerance: the impact of livestock depredation and compensation payments on rural citizens' attitudes toward wolves. Conservation Biology 17: 15001511.Google Scholar
Navarro, L.M. & Pereira, H.M. (2012) Rewilding abandoned landscapes in Europe. Ecosystems 15: 900912.Google Scholar
Newing, H., Eagle, C.M., Puri, R.K. & Watson, C.W. (2011) Conducting Research in Conservation: Social Science Methods and Practice. London, UK: Routledge.Google Scholar
Nummi, P. & Pellikka, J. (2012) Do female sex fantasies reflect adaptations for sperm competition. Annales Zoologici Fennici 49 (1–2): 93102.Google Scholar
Nyhus, P.J., Fisher, H., Madden, F. & Osofsky, S. (2003) Taking the bite out of wildlife damage: the challenges of wildlife compensation schemes. Conservation Practice 4: 3740.Google Scholar
Ogada, M., Woodroffe, R., Oguge, N. & Frank, L. (2003) Limiting depredation by African carnivores: the role of livestock husbandry. Conservation Biology 17 (6): 15211530.Google Scholar
Palmeira, F.B.L., Crashaw, P.G. Jr, Haddad, C.M., Ferraz, K.M.P.M.B. & Verdade, L.M. (2008) Cattle depredation by puma (Puma concolor) and jaguar (Panthera onca) in central-western Brazil. Biological Conservation 141: 118125.Google Scholar
Parry, L., Peres, C.A., Day, B. & Amaral, S. (2010) Rural-urban migration brings conservation threats and opportunities to Amazonian watersheds. Conservation Letters 3: 251259.Google Scholar
Rassmussen, G.S.A. (1999) Livestock predation by the painted hunting dog Lycaon pictus in a cattle ranching region of Zimbabwe: a case study. Biological Conservation 88: 133139.Google Scholar
Rau, J.R. & Jiménez, J.E. (2002) Diet of puma (Puma concolor, Carnivora: Felidae) in Coastal and Andean ranges of southern Chile. Studies on Neotropical Fauna and Environment 37 (3): 201205.Google Scholar
Rey Benayas, J.M., Martins, A., Nicolau, J.M. & Schulz, J. (2007) Abandonment of agricultural land: an overview of drivers and consequences. CAB Reviews: Perspectives in Agriculture, Veterinary Science and Natural Resources 2 (57): 114.Google Scholar
Ripple, W.J. & Beschta, R.L. (2006) Linking a cougar decline, trophic cascade, and catastrophic regime shift in Zion National Park. Biological Conservation 133: 397408.Google Scholar
Ripple, W.J., Estes, J.A., Beschta, R.L., Wilmers, C.C., Ritchie, E.G., Hebblewhite, M., Berger, J., Elmhagen, B., Letnic, M., Nelson, M.P., et al. (2014) Status and ecological effects of the world's largest carnivores. Science 343: doi: 10.1126/science.1241484.Google Scholar
Robel, R.J., Dayton, A.D., Henderson, F.R., Meduna, R.L. & Spaeth, C.W. (1981) Relationship between husbandry methods and sheep losses to canine predators. Journal of Wildlife Management 45: 894911.Google Scholar
Robson, J.P. & Berkes, F. (2011). Exploring some of the myths of land use change: can rural to urban migration drive declines in biodiversity? Global Environmental Change 21: 844854.Google Scholar
Romo, M. (1998) Pastores del Sur Andino. Percepción y representación del ambiente. Estudios Atacameños 16: 209230.Google Scholar
Sánchez-Mercado, A., Ferrer-Paris, J.R., Yerena, E., García-Rangel, S. & Rodríguez-Clark, K.M. (2008) Factor affecting poaching risk to vulnerable Andean bears Tremarctos ornatus in the Cordillera de Mérida, Venezuela: space, parks and people. Oryx 42 (3): 437447.Google Scholar
SAG (2011) Legislación sobre fauna silvestre. Report. División de Protección de los Recursos Naturales Renovables, Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero. Ministerio de Agricultura, Gobierno de Chile, Santiago, Chile.Google Scholar
St John, F.A.V., Keane, A.M., Edward-Jones, G., Jones, L., Yarnell, R.W. & Jones, J.P.G. (2011) Identifying indicators of illegal behavior: carnivore killing in human-managed landscapes. Proceedings of the Royal Society B-Biological Sciences 279: 804812.Google Scholar
Takahata, C., Nielsen, S.E., Takii, A. & Izumiyama, S. (2014) Habitat selection of a large carnivore along human-wildlife boundaries in a highly modified landscape. PLoS ONE 9 (1): e86181 doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0086181.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thirgood, S., Woodroffe, R. & Rabinowitz, A. (2005) The impact of human-wildlife conflict on human lives and livelihoods. In: People and Wildlife: Conflict or Coexistence?, ed. Woodroffe, R., Thirgood, S. & Rabinowitz, A., pp. 1326. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Treves, A. & Bruskotter, J.T. (2014) Tolerance for predatory wildlife. Science 344: 476477.Google Scholar
Treves, A. & Naughton-Treves, L. (1999) Risk and opportunity for humans coexisting with large carnivores. Journal Human Evolution 36: 275282.Google Scholar
Treves, A. & Naughton-Treves, L. (2005) Evaluating lethal control in the management of human-wildlife conflict. In: People and Wildlife: Conflict or Coexistence?, ed. Woodroffe, R., Thirgood, S. & Rabinowitz, A., pp. 86106. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Treves, A., Jurewicz, R., Naughton-Treves, L., Harper, E.L., Mladenoff, D.J., Rose, R.A., Sickley, T.A. & Wydeven, A.P. (2002) Wolf depredation on domestic animals: control and compensation in Wisconsin, 1976–2000. Wildlife Society Bulletin 30: 231241.Google Scholar
Treves, A., Wallace, R.B., Naughton-Treves, L. & Morales, A. (2006) Co-managing human-wildlife conflicts: a review. Human Dimensions of Wildlife 11: 114.Google Scholar
Villagrán, C. & Castro, V. (1997) Etnobotánica y manejo ganadero de las vegas, bofedales y quebradas en el Loa superior, Andes de Antofagasta, Segunda Región, Chile. Revista Chungará 29 (2): 275304.Google Scholar
Villalobos, R. & Iriarte, A. (2014) Assessing the conflict cougar-Aymara indigenous in the Andes High Plateau, Chile. In: Simposio Internacional Conservación de Felinos en América, May 23–26, 2014, ed. Panthera, p. 25. Selva Verde, Sarapiquí, Costa Rica.Google Scholar
Walker, S. & Novaro, A (2010) The world´s southernmost pumas in Patagonia and the Southern Andes. In: Cougar: Ecology and Conservation, ed. Hornocker, M. & Negri, S., pp. 91102. Chicago, IL, USA: The University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Wang, S.W. & Macdonald, D.W. (2006) Livestock predation by carnivores in Jigme Singye Wangchuck National Park, Bhutan. Biological Conservation 129: 558565.Google Scholar
Woodroffe, R. & Ginsberg, J.R. (1998) Edge effects and the extinction of populations inside protected areas. Science 280: 21262128.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Woodroffe, R., Frank, L.G., Lindsey, P., Ranah, S. & Romañach, S. (2007) Livestock husbandry as a tool for carnivore conservation in Africa's community rangelands: a case-control study. Biodiversity Conservation 16: 12451260.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zapata, C. (2007) Memoria e historia: El proyecto de una identidad colectiva entre los aymara de Chile. Chungará 39: 171183.Google Scholar
Zimmermann, A., Walpole, M.J. & Leader-Williams, N. (2005) Cattle ranchers’ attitudes to conflicts with jaguar Panthera onca in the Pantanal of Brazil. Oryx 39 (4): 406412.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Ohrens supplementary material S1

Appendix

Download Ohrens supplementary material S1(File)
File 17.6 KB