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Optimization of wildlife management in a large game reserve through waterpoints manipulation: A bio-economic analysis

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 11:49 authored by Emmanuel Mwakiwa, Willem de Boer, John HearneJohn Hearne, Rob Slotow, F van Langevelde, Mike Peel, Cornelia Grant, Yolanda Pretorius, Johannes Stigter, Andrew Skidmore, I HEITKONIG, HEnrik de Knegt, Edward Kohi, Nicky Knox, Herbert Prins
Surface water is one of the constraining resources for herbivore populations in semi-arid regions. Artificial waterpoints are constructed by wildlife managers to supplement natural water supplies, to support herbivore populations. The aim of this paper is to analyse how a landowner may realize his ecological and economic goals by manipulating waterpoints for the management of an elephant population, a water-dependent species in the presence of water-independent species. We develop a theoretical bio-economic framework to analyse the optimization of wildlife management objectives (in this case revenue generation from both consumptive and non-consumptive use and biodiversity conservation), using waterpoint construction as a control variable. The model provides a bio-economic framework for analysing optimization problems where a control has direct effects on one herbivore species but indirect effects on the other. A landowner may be interested only in maximization of profits either from elephant offtake and/or tourism revenue, ignoring the negative effects that could be brought about by elephants to biodiversity. If the landowner does not take the indirect effects of waterpoints into consideration, then the game reserve management, as the authority entrusted with the sustainable management of the game reserve, might use economic instruments such as subsidies or taxes to the landowners to enforce sound waterpoint management.

History

Journal

Journal of Environmental Management

Volume

114

Start page

352

End page

361

Total pages

10

Publisher

Academic Press

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

Former Identifier

2006039476

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2013-07-17