Times Colonist

War linked to wildlife decline

Researcher­s find animal population­s vulnerable to upheaval caused by armed conflicts

- KAREN KAPLAN

To the list of ways that humans are making it hard for zebras, giraffes and other large mammals to survive in the wild, you can now add war.

Researcher­s have new evidence that animals are exquisitel­y vulnerable to the effects of warfare.

They analyzed 65 years of armed conflicts in Africa and found that exposure to just one year of war within a 20-year period was enough to destabiliz­e population­s in the wild.

“The mere occurrence of conflict, irrespecti­ve of its human death toll, was sufficient to diminish wildlife population­s,” according to a study published this week in the journal Nature.

“Even low-grade, infrequent conflict is sufficient to drop population trajectori­es below replacemen­t.”

Considerin­g that war is bad for people, it might seem obvious that it’s bad for animals. But previous case studies have found it can have mixed effects.

In some cases, animals get caught in the crossfire of cannons, large guns and other artillery.

Hungry soldiers go hunting for bushmeat. Poachers seeking to finance their military excursions might target elephants, rhinoceros­es or other desirable species.

But in other cases, combat can scare people away from wildlife areas, relaxing the pressure on the animals that live there.

It might even force businesses to abandon mining and drilling operations, giving animals a further respite.

Joshua Daskin and Robert M. Pringle of Princeton University’s Department of Ecology and Evolutiona­ry Biology wanted to see if they could find an overarchin­g effect of warfare, with a focus on Africa.

They began by looking at all protected wildlife areas in Africa that were at least five square kilometres in size.

According to the World Database on Protected Areas maintained by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature and the United Nations Environmen­t Programme, there were 3,585 such areas, spread across 51 countries.

Next, Daskin and Pringle examined the dates and locations of armed conflicts between 1946 and 2010 to see when and where they overlapped with the protected areas.

To qualify as an “armed conflict,” an event had to involve at least one human death and be related to an “organized conflict” that involved at least 25 deaths in the same year.

Overall, they found that armed conflicts touched 71 per cent of Africa’s protected areas at least once during the study period. In addition, 25 per cent of them experience­d nine years of conflict or more.

To see how the animals in those areas were affected, the researcher­s scoured scientific literature for reports on mammals that lived there.

Their list included antelopes, giraffes, elephants, lions, cheetahs, zebras, baboons, gorillas, warthogs, hyenas, rhinoceros­es, hippopotam­uses and gazelles.

They were able to find informatio­n on 253 population­s of animals from 36 species living in 126 protected areas within 19 countries.

Each of these population­s had been counted multiple times in the same area.

Then they built a series of mathematic­al models to see which factors helped explain the changes in those animal population­s.

The frequency of armed conflict was only one of the factors considered; others included the intensity of those conflicts (as measured by human death toll), the population density of humans living nearby, the distance from a protected area to the nearest urban center, the size of the protected areas and the size of the animals.

The models that did the best job of predicting changes in animal population­s relied on informatio­n about the frequency of armed conflicts, according to the study.

These models showed that when protected areas were peaceful, animal population­s were “generally stable,” Daskin and Pringle wrote.

But population­s shrank over time when their homes were exposed to “even low levels of conflict,” the researcher­s wrote.

Over the entire 65-year period, all it took to set animal population­s on a path of decline was a single year of war in a span of two decades.

When the team narrowed its focus to the more recent period from 1989 to 2010, it found animals were even more sensitive — exposure to war in one year of a 50-year span would hinder a population’s ability to maintain itself.

“Conflict frequency consistent­ly predicted wildlife decline,” the researcher­s wrote.

Other things did not. For instance, the size of the protected areas didn’t seem to have any bearing on the population­s of the animals living in them. Nor did the intensity of the conflict going on around them.

These and other findings led the researcher­s to hypothesiz­e that military activity per se isn’t the problem for animals; rather, it’s “the effects of socioecono­mic upheaval and livelihood disruption associated conflict” that are making a difference.

Further research will be needed to see whether their hypothesis is correct, the researcher­s wrote.

They also noted a potential silver lining: Although a small amount of war exposure had a measurable effect on wild animals, the size of that effect was “less severe” than previous research would have led them to expect.

 ??  ?? A hippopotam­us charges into the waters of Lake Urema, in Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique. Gorongosa’s hippos and other wildlife were devastated by civil war in the 1980s and 90s, but have recovered dramatical­ly thanks to ecological restoratio­n.
A hippopotam­us charges into the waters of Lake Urema, in Gorongosa National Park, Mozambique. Gorongosa’s hippos and other wildlife were devastated by civil war in the 1980s and 90s, but have recovered dramatical­ly thanks to ecological restoratio­n.

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