Hunting in Indonesian New Guinea: dogs, conservation and culture

Hunting has a complex and contested relationship with conservation: it can deplete and threaten vulnerable wildlife but can also motivate protection and good stewardship. This study aims to advance the ethnographic information of hunting with dogs, in particular, the increasing use of dogs in huntin...

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Autores principales: Pattiselanno, F., lloyd, J.K.F., Krockenberger, A., Arobaya, A.Y.S., Sheil, D.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Universidade Estadual da Paraiba/Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco (Ethnobiology and Conservation) 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/145213
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author Pattiselanno, F.
lloyd, J.K.F.
Krockenberger, A.
Arobaya, A.Y.S.
Sheil, D.
author_browse Arobaya, A.Y.S.
Krockenberger, A.
Pattiselanno, F.
Sheil, D.
lloyd, J.K.F.
author_facet Pattiselanno, F.
lloyd, J.K.F.
Krockenberger, A.
Arobaya, A.Y.S.
Sheil, D.
author_sort Pattiselanno, F.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Hunting has a complex and contested relationship with conservation: it can deplete and threaten vulnerable wildlife but can also motivate protection and good stewardship. This study aims to advance the ethnographic information of hunting with dogs, in particular, the increasing use of dogs in hunting, as such practice is a particular concern among conservationists. We present a case study from the lowland costal forest of Tambrauw in West Papua Province – Indonesian New Guinea using information gathered by assessing the activities and success of thirty-three hunters. The hunters identified 301 successful kills in a total of 654 hours of hunting. Five different prey species were reported across the study sites in a 7-month time period. Interestingly, active hunting without dogs had a higher yield (kills per hour) than hunting with them (0.700 versus 0.38 kills per hour), especially for deer, but hunting with dogs is the only method that seems to favour the capture of pigs over deer. Dogs are not valued for their role in hunting alone but also have less tangible cultural values also protect hunters and also their families from animals and spirits. We conclude that hunting with dogs is the only method that seems to favour the capture of pigs over deer. We find that dogs can provoke social conflicts and other problems. More attention should be given to local hunting and the methods used. Hunting with dogs impacts the quantity and composition of the hunt, this requires a careful appraisal, as dogs also provide wider cultural and protective roles.
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institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Universidade Estadual da Paraiba/Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco (Ethnobiology and Conservation)
publisherStr Universidade Estadual da Paraiba/Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco (Ethnobiology and Conservation)
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1452132025-10-26T13:01:49Z Hunting in Indonesian New Guinea: dogs, conservation and culture Pattiselanno, F. lloyd, J.K.F. Krockenberger, A. Arobaya, A.Y.S. Sheil, D. hunting biodiversity conservation Hunting has a complex and contested relationship with conservation: it can deplete and threaten vulnerable wildlife but can also motivate protection and good stewardship. This study aims to advance the ethnographic information of hunting with dogs, in particular, the increasing use of dogs in hunting, as such practice is a particular concern among conservationists. We present a case study from the lowland costal forest of Tambrauw in West Papua Province – Indonesian New Guinea using information gathered by assessing the activities and success of thirty-three hunters. The hunters identified 301 successful kills in a total of 654 hours of hunting. Five different prey species were reported across the study sites in a 7-month time period. Interestingly, active hunting without dogs had a higher yield (kills per hour) than hunting with them (0.700 versus 0.38 kills per hour), especially for deer, but hunting with dogs is the only method that seems to favour the capture of pigs over deer. Dogs are not valued for their role in hunting alone but also have less tangible cultural values also protect hunters and also their families from animals and spirits. We conclude that hunting with dogs is the only method that seems to favour the capture of pigs over deer. We find that dogs can provoke social conflicts and other problems. More attention should be given to local hunting and the methods used. Hunting with dogs impacts the quantity and composition of the hunt, this requires a careful appraisal, as dogs also provide wider cultural and protective roles. 2023-09 2024-06-13T04:08:31Z 2024-06-13T04:08:31Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/145213 en Open Access Universidade Estadual da Paraiba/Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco (Ethnobiology and Conservation) Pattiselanno, F., lloyd, J. K. F., Krockenberger, A. ., Arobaya, A. Y. S., & Sheil, D. (2023). Hunting in Indonesian New Guinea: dogs, conservation and culture. Ethnobiology and Conservation, 12. https://doi.org/10.15451/ec2023-09-12.20-1-11
spellingShingle hunting
biodiversity conservation
Pattiselanno, F.
lloyd, J.K.F.
Krockenberger, A.
Arobaya, A.Y.S.
Sheil, D.
Hunting in Indonesian New Guinea: dogs, conservation and culture
title Hunting in Indonesian New Guinea: dogs, conservation and culture
title_full Hunting in Indonesian New Guinea: dogs, conservation and culture
title_fullStr Hunting in Indonesian New Guinea: dogs, conservation and culture
title_full_unstemmed Hunting in Indonesian New Guinea: dogs, conservation and culture
title_short Hunting in Indonesian New Guinea: dogs, conservation and culture
title_sort hunting in indonesian new guinea dogs conservation and culture
topic hunting
biodiversity conservation
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/145213
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AT krockenbergera huntinginindonesiannewguineadogsconservationandculture
AT arobayaays huntinginindonesiannewguineadogsconservationandculture
AT sheild huntinginindonesiannewguineadogsconservationandculture