Profiling the types of restaurants that sell wild meat in Central African cities

Central African cities are major centres of demand for wild meat, even when affordable alternative proteins are widely available. Many people eat wild meat in restaurants; therefore, restaurateurs are well placed to provide insights into the wild meat trade and consumer preferences. We surveyed 326...

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Main Authors: Wright, J.H., Malekani, D., Funk, S.M., Ntshila, J., Mayet, L., Mwinyihali, R., Fa, J.E., Wieland, M.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Wiley 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120117
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author Wright, J.H.
Malekani, D.
Funk, S.M.
Ntshila, J.
Mayet, L.
Mwinyihali, R.
Fa, J.E.
Wieland, M.
author_browse Fa, J.E.
Funk, S.M.
Malekani, D.
Mayet, L.
Mwinyihali, R.
Ntshila, J.
Wieland, M.
Wright, J.H.
author_facet Wright, J.H.
Malekani, D.
Funk, S.M.
Ntshila, J.
Mayet, L.
Mwinyihali, R.
Fa, J.E.
Wieland, M.
author_sort Wright, J.H.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Central African cities are major centres of demand for wild meat, even when affordable alternative proteins are widely available. Many people eat wild meat in restaurants; therefore, restaurateurs are well placed to provide insights into the wild meat trade and consumer preferences. We surveyed 326 restaurants in Brazzaville and Kinshasa, the adjoining capital cities of the Republic of Congo and Democratic Republic of the Congo, to determine which types of restaurants sell wild meat, how sales of wild meat dishes compared with those containing other proteins, and the importance of wild meat to these businesses. The majority of wild meat-selling restaurants are informal establishments owned by women. Although most only sell wild meat dishes weekly, we estimate that nearly 10,000 wild meat dishes are consumed daily in restaurants across Brazzaville and Kinshasa. Its wide availability reinforces the social norm around eating wild meat, yet few restaurateurs considered wild meat to be central to the viability of their business. It is important to distinguish between restaurants reliant on wild meat sales and those that offer it to diversify their menus. Forging partnerships with restaurateurs offer untapped potential to develop mutually beneficial allegiances to further wild meat demand reduction efforts.
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spelling CGSpace1201172023-07-03T08:03:10Z Profiling the types of restaurants that sell wild meat in Central African cities Wright, J.H. Malekani, D. Funk, S.M. Ntshila, J. Mayet, L. Mwinyihali, R. Fa, J.E. Wieland, M. wildlife trade hunting Central African cities are major centres of demand for wild meat, even when affordable alternative proteins are widely available. Many people eat wild meat in restaurants; therefore, restaurateurs are well placed to provide insights into the wild meat trade and consumer preferences. We surveyed 326 restaurants in Brazzaville and Kinshasa, the adjoining capital cities of the Republic of Congo and Democratic Republic of the Congo, to determine which types of restaurants sell wild meat, how sales of wild meat dishes compared with those containing other proteins, and the importance of wild meat to these businesses. The majority of wild meat-selling restaurants are informal establishments owned by women. Although most only sell wild meat dishes weekly, we estimate that nearly 10,000 wild meat dishes are consumed daily in restaurants across Brazzaville and Kinshasa. Its wide availability reinforces the social norm around eating wild meat, yet few restaurateurs considered wild meat to be central to the viability of their business. It is important to distinguish between restaurants reliant on wild meat sales and those that offer it to diversify their menus. Forging partnerships with restaurateurs offer untapped potential to develop mutually beneficial allegiances to further wild meat demand reduction efforts. 2022-06 2022-07-18T01:53:41Z 2022-07-18T01:53:41Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120117 en Open Access Wiley Wright, J.H., Malekani, D., Funk, S.M., Ntshila, J., Mayet, L., Mwinyihali, R., Fa, J.E., Wieland, M. 2022. Profiling the types of restaurants that sell wild meat in Central African cities. African Journal of Ecology, 60(2), 197-204. https://doi.org/10.1111/aje.12993
spellingShingle wildlife
trade
hunting
Wright, J.H.
Malekani, D.
Funk, S.M.
Ntshila, J.
Mayet, L.
Mwinyihali, R.
Fa, J.E.
Wieland, M.
Profiling the types of restaurants that sell wild meat in Central African cities
title Profiling the types of restaurants that sell wild meat in Central African cities
title_full Profiling the types of restaurants that sell wild meat in Central African cities
title_fullStr Profiling the types of restaurants that sell wild meat in Central African cities
title_full_unstemmed Profiling the types of restaurants that sell wild meat in Central African cities
title_short Profiling the types of restaurants that sell wild meat in Central African cities
title_sort profiling the types of restaurants that sell wild meat in central african cities
topic wildlife
trade
hunting
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120117
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