Human-wildlife conflict mitigation in Peninsular Malaysia : lessons learnt, current views and future directions

Among the wild animals in peninsular Malaysia tigers and elephants seem to be the most threatened species after the Malaysian rhinoceros which have dwindled to critically low numbers. Agriculture expansion and palm oil production is the main driving force that affects natural habitat of these magnif...

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Main Author: Asimopoulos, Stamatios
Format: H2
Language:Inglés
Published: SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development 2016
Subjects:
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author Asimopoulos, Stamatios
author_browse Asimopoulos, Stamatios
author_facet Asimopoulos, Stamatios
author_sort Asimopoulos, Stamatios
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Among the wild animals in peninsular Malaysia tigers and elephants seem to be the most threatened species after the Malaysian rhinoceros which have dwindled to critically low numbers. Agriculture expansion and palm oil production is the main driving force that affects natural habitat of these magnificent mammals bringing people in conflict with wild animals. Human-Wildlife conflicts is not a new phenomenon and tend to occur when wildlife requirements overlap with those of human populations, creating costs to residents and wild animals. Mitigation methods try to minimize these unwilling conflicts which have negative impacts to farmers’ livelihood and animals’ population. Governmental agencies as well as NGOs attempt to organize communities in order to prevent potential problems due to mismanagement of natural resources. In this study, participant observation, interviews with conservation agencies and online survey will attend to show the effectiveness of different methods for HWC mitigation. Collaboration among environmental agencies and communities and education seem to be the best method towards environmental conservation.
format H2
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institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2016
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spelling RepoSLU92932016-08-04T12:56:01Z Human-wildlife conflict mitigation in Peninsular Malaysia : lessons learnt, current views and future directions Asimopoulos, Stamatios wildlife wild animals Malaysia environmental conservation agriculture expansion Among the wild animals in peninsular Malaysia tigers and elephants seem to be the most threatened species after the Malaysian rhinoceros which have dwindled to critically low numbers. Agriculture expansion and palm oil production is the main driving force that affects natural habitat of these magnificent mammals bringing people in conflict with wild animals. Human-Wildlife conflicts is not a new phenomenon and tend to occur when wildlife requirements overlap with those of human populations, creating costs to residents and wild animals. Mitigation methods try to minimize these unwilling conflicts which have negative impacts to farmers’ livelihood and animals’ population. Governmental agencies as well as NGOs attempt to organize communities in order to prevent potential problems due to mismanagement of natural resources. In this study, participant observation, interviews with conservation agencies and online survey will attend to show the effectiveness of different methods for HWC mitigation. Collaboration among environmental agencies and communities and education seem to be the best method towards environmental conservation. SLU/Dept. of Urban and Rural Development 2016 H2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/9293/
spellingShingle wildlife
wild animals
Malaysia
environmental conservation
agriculture expansion
Asimopoulos, Stamatios
Human-wildlife conflict mitigation in Peninsular Malaysia : lessons learnt, current views and future directions
title Human-wildlife conflict mitigation in Peninsular Malaysia : lessons learnt, current views and future directions
title_full Human-wildlife conflict mitigation in Peninsular Malaysia : lessons learnt, current views and future directions
title_fullStr Human-wildlife conflict mitigation in Peninsular Malaysia : lessons learnt, current views and future directions
title_full_unstemmed Human-wildlife conflict mitigation in Peninsular Malaysia : lessons learnt, current views and future directions
title_short Human-wildlife conflict mitigation in Peninsular Malaysia : lessons learnt, current views and future directions
title_sort human-wildlife conflict mitigation in peninsular malaysia : lessons learnt, current views and future directions
topic wildlife
wild animals
Malaysia
environmental conservation
agriculture expansion