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Transitioning towards human–large carnivore coexistence in extensive grazing systems
by
Boronyak, Louise
, Jacobs, Brent
, Wallach, Arian
in
Adoption of innovations
/ Animals
/ Atmospheric Sciences
/ Biodiversity
/ Capacity building approach
/ Carnivora
/ Carnivores
/ Coexistence
/ Conservation of Natural Resources
/ Earth and Environmental Science
/ Ecological function
/ Ecology
/ Environment
/ Environmental Engineering/Biotechnology
/ Environmental Management
/ Ethics
/ Grazing
/ Humans
/ Innovations
/ Land use
/ Landscape
/ landscapes
/ Leverage
/ Livestock
/ Livestock production
/ Oppression
/ PERSPECTIVE
/ Physical Geography
/ Predation
/ Predatory Behavior
/ Process engineering
/ Production
/ Rangelands
/ risk
/ Social costs
/ Welfare
2020
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Transitioning towards human–large carnivore coexistence in extensive grazing systems
by
Boronyak, Louise
, Jacobs, Brent
, Wallach, Arian
in
Adoption of innovations
/ Animals
/ Atmospheric Sciences
/ Biodiversity
/ Capacity building approach
/ Carnivora
/ Carnivores
/ Coexistence
/ Conservation of Natural Resources
/ Earth and Environmental Science
/ Ecological function
/ Ecology
/ Environment
/ Environmental Engineering/Biotechnology
/ Environmental Management
/ Ethics
/ Grazing
/ Humans
/ Innovations
/ Land use
/ Landscape
/ landscapes
/ Leverage
/ Livestock
/ Livestock production
/ Oppression
/ PERSPECTIVE
/ Physical Geography
/ Predation
/ Predatory Behavior
/ Process engineering
/ Production
/ Rangelands
/ risk
/ Social costs
/ Welfare
2020
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Transitioning towards human–large carnivore coexistence in extensive grazing systems
by
Boronyak, Louise
, Jacobs, Brent
, Wallach, Arian
in
Adoption of innovations
/ Animals
/ Atmospheric Sciences
/ Biodiversity
/ Capacity building approach
/ Carnivora
/ Carnivores
/ Coexistence
/ Conservation of Natural Resources
/ Earth and Environmental Science
/ Ecological function
/ Ecology
/ Environment
/ Environmental Engineering/Biotechnology
/ Environmental Management
/ Ethics
/ Grazing
/ Humans
/ Innovations
/ Land use
/ Landscape
/ landscapes
/ Leverage
/ Livestock
/ Livestock production
/ Oppression
/ PERSPECTIVE
/ Physical Geography
/ Predation
/ Predatory Behavior
/ Process engineering
/ Production
/ Rangelands
/ risk
/ Social costs
/ Welfare
2020
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Transitioning towards human–large carnivore coexistence in extensive grazing systems
Journal Article
Transitioning towards human–large carnivore coexistence in extensive grazing systems
2020
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Overview
In light of escalating threats to biodiversity, conflicts between humans and large carnivores in production landscapes must be resolved. We explore how interactions between humans, large carnivores, and livestock can be modified to promote coexistence. We identify four rationales for building coexistence capacities in extensive rangeland livestock production systems: (1) livestock production is a dominant terrestrial land use; (2) large carnivores provide critical contributions to ecological functions; (3) the persecution of large carnivores has high ethical, welfare, reputational and social costs; and (4) a growing body of evidence shows that lethal control can be counterproductive to reducing predation risk. Two key leverage points to foster human–carnivore coexistence are the adoption of preventive non-lethal innovations, and the creation of an enabling environment. Leverage points must be appropriate at the local landscape scale and contribute towards global efforts to conserve large carnivores.
Publisher
Springer Science + Business Media,Springer Netherlands,Springer Nature B.V
Subject
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