Variable social-ecological indicators across a Tanzanian protected area network

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Standard

Variable social-ecological indicators across a Tanzanian protected area network. / Vallin, Juliette; Raycraft, Justin; Bettermann, Danielle et al.
In: Biological Conservation, Vol. 308, 111214, 08.2025.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Vallin, J, Raycraft, J, Bettermann, D, Kioko, J, Kissui, BM, Koester, S, Lindsay, K, Ole, EM, Ramirez, E, Spizuco, B, Loos, J & Kiffner, C 2025, 'Variable social-ecological indicators across a Tanzanian protected area network', Biological Conservation, vol. 308, 111214. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2025.111214

APA

Vallin, J., Raycraft, J., Bettermann, D., Kioko, J., Kissui, B. M., Koester, S., Lindsay, K., Ole, E. M., Ramirez, E., Spizuco, B., Loos, J., & Kiffner, C. (2025). Variable social-ecological indicators across a Tanzanian protected area network. Biological Conservation, 308, Article 111214. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2025.111214

Vancouver

Vallin J, Raycraft J, Bettermann D, Kioko J, Kissui BM, Koester S et al. Variable social-ecological indicators across a Tanzanian protected area network. Biological Conservation. 2025 Aug;308:111214. doi: 10.1016/j.biocon.2025.111214

Bibtex

@article{866e7f7126a04b209281ed5940be0ce4,
title = "Variable social-ecological indicators across a Tanzanian protected area network",
abstract = "Protected areas (PAs) represent the most dominant conservation model in the world, though existing research on how and why their conservation outcomes vary remain scarce. In contribution to this discourse, we evaluated the densities and temporal trends of seven herbivorous mammal species across a protected area (PA) network in the Tarangire Ecosystem, Tanzania, and assessed human-wildlife interactions for 19 species. We conducted seasonal wildlife surveys inside five PAs and structured questionnaires in adjacent villages. Our study focused on two national parks, two community-based conservation areas, and one game-controlled area with limited management capacity. We extracted several ecological (wildlife densities and their trends over time) and human-wildlife interaction (number of herbivore and carnivore species associated with benefits, costs and illegal use) indicators and compared them across the PAs using generalized linear models. We found that both national parks and community-based conservation areas can support high densities of mammal species with stable or positive annual trends. In some instances, these wildlife population dynamics were associated with negative human-wildlife interactions near the boundaries of the PA, but this did not emerge as a consistent pattern. National parks can also be associated with negative annual population trends and negative human-wildlife interactions near their boundaries. The game-controlled area scored the lowest on both ecological and human-wildlife interaction indicators highlighting the importance of management-in-practice. Our findings suggest that the outcomes of PAs vary considerably, even within the same ecosystem, and that local social-ecological context likely affects their sustainability.",
keywords = "Area-based conservation, Conservation effectiveness, Conservation evaluation, East Africa, Human-wildlife interaction, Social-ecological systems, Biology",
author = "Juliette Vallin and Justin Raycraft and Danielle Bettermann and John Kioko and Kissui, {Bernard M.} and Stephen Koester and Kiana Lindsay and Ole, {Edwin Maingo} and Emily Ramirez and Bryan Spizuco and Jacqueline Loos and Christian Kiffner",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2025",
year = "2025",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1016/j.biocon.2025.111214",
language = "English",
volume = "308",
journal = "Biological Conservation",
issn = "0006-3207",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Variable social-ecological indicators across a Tanzanian protected area network

AU - Vallin, Juliette

AU - Raycraft, Justin

AU - Bettermann, Danielle

AU - Kioko, John

AU - Kissui, Bernard M.

AU - Koester, Stephen

AU - Lindsay, Kiana

AU - Ole, Edwin Maingo

AU - Ramirez, Emily

AU - Spizuco, Bryan

AU - Loos, Jacqueline

AU - Kiffner, Christian

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2025

PY - 2025/8

Y1 - 2025/8

N2 - Protected areas (PAs) represent the most dominant conservation model in the world, though existing research on how and why their conservation outcomes vary remain scarce. In contribution to this discourse, we evaluated the densities and temporal trends of seven herbivorous mammal species across a protected area (PA) network in the Tarangire Ecosystem, Tanzania, and assessed human-wildlife interactions for 19 species. We conducted seasonal wildlife surveys inside five PAs and structured questionnaires in adjacent villages. Our study focused on two national parks, two community-based conservation areas, and one game-controlled area with limited management capacity. We extracted several ecological (wildlife densities and their trends over time) and human-wildlife interaction (number of herbivore and carnivore species associated with benefits, costs and illegal use) indicators and compared them across the PAs using generalized linear models. We found that both national parks and community-based conservation areas can support high densities of mammal species with stable or positive annual trends. In some instances, these wildlife population dynamics were associated with negative human-wildlife interactions near the boundaries of the PA, but this did not emerge as a consistent pattern. National parks can also be associated with negative annual population trends and negative human-wildlife interactions near their boundaries. The game-controlled area scored the lowest on both ecological and human-wildlife interaction indicators highlighting the importance of management-in-practice. Our findings suggest that the outcomes of PAs vary considerably, even within the same ecosystem, and that local social-ecological context likely affects their sustainability.

AB - Protected areas (PAs) represent the most dominant conservation model in the world, though existing research on how and why their conservation outcomes vary remain scarce. In contribution to this discourse, we evaluated the densities and temporal trends of seven herbivorous mammal species across a protected area (PA) network in the Tarangire Ecosystem, Tanzania, and assessed human-wildlife interactions for 19 species. We conducted seasonal wildlife surveys inside five PAs and structured questionnaires in adjacent villages. Our study focused on two national parks, two community-based conservation areas, and one game-controlled area with limited management capacity. We extracted several ecological (wildlife densities and their trends over time) and human-wildlife interaction (number of herbivore and carnivore species associated with benefits, costs and illegal use) indicators and compared them across the PAs using generalized linear models. We found that both national parks and community-based conservation areas can support high densities of mammal species with stable or positive annual trends. In some instances, these wildlife population dynamics were associated with negative human-wildlife interactions near the boundaries of the PA, but this did not emerge as a consistent pattern. National parks can also be associated with negative annual population trends and negative human-wildlife interactions near their boundaries. The game-controlled area scored the lowest on both ecological and human-wildlife interaction indicators highlighting the importance of management-in-practice. Our findings suggest that the outcomes of PAs vary considerably, even within the same ecosystem, and that local social-ecological context likely affects their sustainability.

KW - Area-based conservation

KW - Conservation effectiveness

KW - Conservation evaluation

KW - East Africa

KW - Human-wildlife interaction

KW - Social-ecological systems

KW - Biology

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105004473192&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/j.biocon.2025.111214

DO - 10.1016/j.biocon.2025.111214

M3 - Journal articles

AN - SCOPUS:105004473192

VL - 308

JO - Biological Conservation

JF - Biological Conservation

SN - 0006-3207

M1 - 111214

ER -

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