Publication | Closed Access
Towards Wildlife Management in Tropical Forests
165
Citations
30
References
1999
Year
EngineeringWildlife SpeciesNature ConservationMammalogyForest ConservationForestryAgricultural EconomicsNatural Resource ManagementMeat TradeForest Resource ManagementWildlife ManagementTropica ForestsTowards Wildlife ManagementHuman-wildlife RelationshipConservation BiologyDeforestationConservation Policy
Hunting is ubiquitous in tropical forests around the world, and meat from wildlife species is an important source of animal protein for rural populations. Ungulates, primates, and rodents provide most of the biomass consumed, but a wide variety of wildlife species are limited for both subsistence and commerce. Across the tropics, tens of millions of animals and millions of metric tons of meat are hunted and consumed each year. Is this harvest sustainable? Available information and the use of simple sustainability models suggest it is not. The supply of wildlife is limited, a anmal production of large mammals in tropica forests is low when compared to other ecosystems, The demand is increasing as tropical forests become more accessible to hunters, effective human population densities increase, people become more sedentary, traditional hunting practices change, the meat trade becomes more commercial, and demand increases for wild meat from urban centers. If wildlife populations are to be sustained, then management institutions, be they government or community-based, need to be strengthened.
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