Attitudes toward brown bears (Ursus arctos) in Sweden

The Swedish brown bear population has grown from very few animals to at least 2500 individuals in about 80 years time, with a rather constant growth of 1.5 % per year. I wanted to see what the attitudes towards bears are like in Sweden now when the bears expand their habitats closer to urban areas a...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Lindberg, Dan-Erik
Formato: L3
Lenguaje:Inglés
sueco
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies 2008
Materias:
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author Lindberg, Dan-Erik
author_browse Lindberg, Dan-Erik
author_facet Lindberg, Dan-Erik
author_sort Lindberg, Dan-Erik
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description The Swedish brown bear population has grown from very few animals to at least 2500 individuals in about 80 years time, with a rather constant growth of 1.5 % per year. I wanted to see what the attitudes towards bears are like in Sweden now when the bears expand their habitats closer to urban areas and it is getting more common to encounter bears or tracks from bears in nature. A national mail survey was made in 2004, when no human deaths related to bears had occurred for 102 years, and data was analysed from that survey. I show that most Swedes hold positive attitudes toward bears, despite almost half of the respondents being afraid of encounters with bears. Urbanites are the ones with the most positive attitudes, but also the ones who fear bears the most. When compared to studies from other European countries Swedes are less positive towards bears than people from southern Europe. A large portion of the variation in why people hold their attitudes toward bears remains unexplained, which is most likely due to this survey being designed with previous experiences from wolves in mind and attitudes toward bears are not formed on the same grounds. My conclusion was that future surveys need to focus on examining other aspects to how attitudes toward bears are formed in order to gain a full understanding of this.
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institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
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spelling RepoSLU122932017-10-31T12:23:48Z Attitudes toward brown bears (Ursus arctos) in Sweden Attityder mot björn i Sverige Lindberg, Dan-Erik human dimensions attitudes mail survey experience urban vs. rural brown bear Ursus arctos The Swedish brown bear population has grown from very few animals to at least 2500 individuals in about 80 years time, with a rather constant growth of 1.5 % per year. I wanted to see what the attitudes towards bears are like in Sweden now when the bears expand their habitats closer to urban areas and it is getting more common to encounter bears or tracks from bears in nature. A national mail survey was made in 2004, when no human deaths related to bears had occurred for 102 years, and data was analysed from that survey. I show that most Swedes hold positive attitudes toward bears, despite almost half of the respondents being afraid of encounters with bears. Urbanites are the ones with the most positive attitudes, but also the ones who fear bears the most. When compared to studies from other European countries Swedes are less positive towards bears than people from southern Europe. A large portion of the variation in why people hold their attitudes toward bears remains unexplained, which is most likely due to this survey being designed with previous experiences from wolves in mind and attitudes toward bears are not formed on the same grounds. My conclusion was that future surveys need to focus on examining other aspects to how attitudes toward bears are formed in order to gain a full understanding of this. Den svenska björnpopulationen har vuxit från några få djur till minst 2500 individer under de senaste 80 åren, med en ganska konstant tillväxt kring 1.5 % per år. Jag ville se vilka attityder som formats kring björnar i Sverige nu när björnarnas habitat närmar sig stadsregionerna och det blir vanligare att hitta spår av björn i naturen. En enkät skickades ut över hela landet 2004, vid den tidpunkten hade inga människor dödats av björn på 102 år, och datat analyserades av mig hösten 2007. Jag visar att de flesta svenskar har positiva attityder till björnar, trots att nästan hälften av respondenterna är rädda för att möta en björn. Stadsboende människor har mest positiva attityder, men är också de som hyser störst rädsla för björnarna. När jag jämförde med studier från andra europeiska länder visade sig svenskarna ha mindre positiva attityder än människor bosatta i södra Europa. En stor andel av variationen bland attityder mot björn är fortfarande inte klarlagd, vilket förmodligen beror på att den undersökning jag arbetade med blivit utarbetad utifrån erfarenheter med attityder till varg, och attityder till björn bildas på andra grunder. Min slutsats är att framtida undersökningar bör fokusera på att undersöka andra aspekter kring hur attityder till björn formas för att man skall kunna få en fullständig förståelse för detta. SLU/Dept. of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Studies 2008 L3 eng swe https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/12293/
spellingShingle human dimensions
attitudes
mail survey
experience
urban vs. rural
brown bear
Ursus arctos
Lindberg, Dan-Erik
Attitudes toward brown bears (Ursus arctos) in Sweden
title Attitudes toward brown bears (Ursus arctos) in Sweden
title_full Attitudes toward brown bears (Ursus arctos) in Sweden
title_fullStr Attitudes toward brown bears (Ursus arctos) in Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Attitudes toward brown bears (Ursus arctos) in Sweden
title_short Attitudes toward brown bears (Ursus arctos) in Sweden
title_sort attitudes toward brown bears (ursus arctos) in sweden
topic human dimensions
attitudes
mail survey
experience
urban vs. rural
brown bear
Ursus arctos