Publication | Open Access
Pastoralists and wildlife conservation in western China: collaborative management within protected areas on the Tibetan Plateau
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Citations
25
References
2012
Year
Wildlife ConservationPastoralismVast AreasCommunity-based ConservationConservation PoliticsLand UseQinghai ProvinceCollaborative ManagementGeographyNatural Resource ManagementSocial SciencesAnthropologyEnvironmental PlanningLand ConservationConservation BiologyTibetan PlateauConservation PolicyTibetan Plateau Region
Pastoralists have long inhabited the Tibetan Plateau, and their traditional land‑use practices and cultural conservation ethic have helped protect wildlife, yet rapid socio‑economic change and expanding protected areas often leave local communities without a voice in conservation decisions. The study recommends a more comprehensive co‑management model that better integrates pastoralists into wildlife conservation. The authors model a landscape‑level collaborative management partnership among pastoralists, reserve authorities, and other stakeholders in Qinghai Province. The project demonstrates that community ecotourism, herders’ cooperatives, trust funds, and clearer regulatory frameworks can enhance pastoralist participation and wildlife conservation, as shown in the Yangtze headwaters pilot.
Pastoralists have long inhabited vast areas of western China, including the Tibetan Plateau region. Their traditional land use practices and cultural conservation ethic have helped to protect the natural resource base upon which they depend and the wildlife that co-exist with them in the grassland landscapes. However, in a rapidly changing socio-economic environment, including significant expansion of the protected area system and regional comprehensive development plans, local communities do not always have an evident voice in the conservation and development dialogues that closely affect their lives. With introduction and development of collaborative management - that is, a partnership between local communities, nature reserve authorities and other stakeholders - a landscape-level approach to conservation is now being modelled in Qinghai Province. Central to effective co-management are bi-directional relationships. There are also a wealth of direct and indirect services that may be provided by pastoralists under co-management, and in the compensation and payment options available to them in return for their critical services. The contributions of pastoralists to wildlife conservation efforts are significant, but up to now insufficiently recognized. New insights regarding the relationship between pastoralists and wildlife conservation - including the potential role of community ecotourism, the development of local herders' cooperatives and of trust funds, and the need for greater clarity in local regulatory frameworks - are provided herein, with presentation of specific experiences and lessons learned from a project piloted in the headwaters of the Yangtze River over the past decade. A fuller, richer model of co-management is recommended.
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