Towards coexistence: can people's attitudes explain their willingness to live with Sumatran elephants in Indonesia?
Understanding coexistence between humans and threatened wildlife is a central focus in conservation. Way Kambas National Park in Sumatra Island, Indonesia, harbors one of the largest populations of the critically endangered Sumatran elephant (Elephas maximus sumatranus). The people who live alongsid...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1592892023-02-28T16:40:59Z Towards coexistence: can people's attitudes explain their willingness to live with Sumatran elephants in Indonesia? Ardiantiono Sugiyo Johnson, Paul J. Muhammad Irfansyah Lubis Fahrul Amama Sukatmoko Marthy, William Zimmermann, Alexandra Asian School of the Environment Science::Geology Elephant Crop Foraging Human Behavior Understanding coexistence between humans and threatened wildlife is a central focus in conservation. Way Kambas National Park in Sumatra Island, Indonesia, harbors one of the largest populations of the critically endangered Sumatran elephant (Elephas maximus sumatranus). The people who live alongside this population are affected by intensive crop foraging. Our study investigated the factors which influenced attitudes toward elephants. We then evaluated the implications of reported attitudes for future willingness to live with elephants. We surveyed 660 respondents in 22 villages around the park. People generally reported positive attitudes toward elephants (smartness 95%, usefulness 62%, importance 57%, and pleasantness 53%), apart from where human safety was concerned (safety 11%). Each dimension of attitude was explained by different factors including age, gender, knowledge of elephants, and distance to crop foraging locations. Most respondents (62%) expressed no willingness to coexist with elephants. Such willingness was lower when elephants were perceived to be more dangerous, but higher if beliefs in the benefits of elephants were greater. Efforts to improve crop foraging mitigation practice and to increase people's awareness of elephant benefits may promote support for their conservation. Through this study, we advocate the integration of social science to promote human–wildlife coexistence strategies, an approach that is currently limited in Indonesia. Published version This study was funded by US Fish and Wildlife Service. 2022-06-10T06:01:41Z 2022-06-10T06:01:41Z 2021 Journal Article Ardiantiono, Sugiyo, Johnson, P. J., Muhammad Irfansyah Lubis, Fahrul Amama, Sukatmoko, Marthy, W. & Zimmermann, A. (2021). Towards coexistence: can people's attitudes explain their willingness to live with Sumatran elephants in Indonesia?. Conservation Science and Practice, 3(10), e520-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/csp2.520 2578-4854 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159289 10.1111/csp2.520 2-s2.0-85122068393 10 3 e520 en Conservation Science and Practice © 2021 The Authors. Conservation Science and Practice published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. on behalf of Society for Conservation Biology. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, providedthe original work is properly cited. application/pdf |
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Science::Geology Elephant Crop Foraging Human Behavior Ardiantiono Sugiyo Johnson, Paul J. Muhammad Irfansyah Lubis Fahrul Amama Sukatmoko Marthy, William Zimmermann, Alexandra Towards coexistence: can people's attitudes explain their willingness to live with Sumatran elephants in Indonesia? |
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Understanding coexistence between humans and threatened wildlife is a central focus in conservation. Way Kambas National Park in Sumatra Island, Indonesia, harbors one of the largest populations of the critically endangered Sumatran elephant (Elephas maximus sumatranus). The people who live alongside this population are affected by intensive crop foraging. Our study investigated the factors which influenced attitudes toward elephants. We then evaluated the implications of reported attitudes for future willingness to live with elephants. We surveyed 660 respondents in 22 villages around the park. People generally reported positive attitudes toward elephants (smartness 95%, usefulness 62%, importance 57%, and pleasantness 53%), apart from where human safety was concerned (safety 11%). Each dimension of attitude was explained by different factors including age, gender, knowledge of elephants, and distance to crop foraging locations. Most respondents (62%) expressed no willingness to coexist with elephants. Such willingness was lower when elephants were perceived to be more dangerous, but higher if beliefs in the benefits of elephants were greater. Efforts to improve crop foraging mitigation practice and to increase people's awareness of elephant benefits may promote support for their conservation. Through this study, we advocate the integration of social science to promote human–wildlife coexistence strategies, an approach that is currently limited in Indonesia. |
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Asian School of the Environment |
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Asian School of the Environment Ardiantiono Sugiyo Johnson, Paul J. Muhammad Irfansyah Lubis Fahrul Amama Sukatmoko Marthy, William Zimmermann, Alexandra |
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Article |
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Ardiantiono Sugiyo Johnson, Paul J. Muhammad Irfansyah Lubis Fahrul Amama Sukatmoko Marthy, William Zimmermann, Alexandra |
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Towards coexistence: can people's attitudes explain their willingness to live with Sumatran elephants in Indonesia? |
title_short |
Towards coexistence: can people's attitudes explain their willingness to live with Sumatran elephants in Indonesia? |
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Towards coexistence: can people's attitudes explain their willingness to live with Sumatran elephants in Indonesia? |
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Towards coexistence: can people's attitudes explain their willingness to live with Sumatran elephants in Indonesia? |
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Towards coexistence: can people's attitudes explain their willingness to live with Sumatran elephants in Indonesia? |
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towards coexistence: can people's attitudes explain their willingness to live with sumatran elephants in indonesia? |
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2022 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/159289 |
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