Artículos de revistas
Human-carnivore interaction in a context of socio-productive crisis: Assessing smallholder strategies for reducing predation in North-west Patagonia, Argentina
Fecha
2017-12-18Registro en:
Gaspero, Pablo Gabriel; Easdale, Marcos Horacio; Pereira, Javier Adolfo; Fernandez Arhex, Valeria Cristina; Von Thüngen, J.; Human-carnivore interaction in a context of socio-productive crisis: Assessing smallholder strategies for reducing predation in North-west Patagonia, Argentina; Academic Press Ltd - Elsevier Science Ltd; Journal of Arid Environments; 150; 18-12-2017; 92-98
0140-1963
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Gaspero, Pablo Gabriel
Easdale, Marcos Horacio
Pereira, Javier Adolfo
Fernandez Arhex, Valeria Cristina
Von Thüngen, J.
Resumen
Mitigating carnivore-livestock interaction is essential to ensuring the persistence of carnivores in landscapes dominated by livestock activity. Our aim was to explore, in the context of social and productive crises triggered by environmental events, the values and attitudes adopted by smallholders in relation to wild carnivores. We performed semi-structured interviews on issues related to the management decisions of the productive system. To study the relative importance and associations among different factors, we constructed causal maps and used centrality measures based on network analysis to identify the dominant discourse. Although carnivores were perceived as one of the central problems of the map, retaliatory killing was not a central loss-prevention strategy. Smallholders turned to semi-intensification of livestock practices to increase the efficiency of their production as a response to different perceived problems. Lethal control techniques were weakly associated with a subsidized control system, which the state implements to stimulate the hunting of carnivores. Whereas policies were oriented to control native wild predators as the major source of disturbance, strategies of smallholders were based on adaptive responses to multiple perceived problems. This work provides new insights to improve the monitoring of mitigation measures to promote effective evidence-based policy.