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Systematic map of human–raptor interaction and coexistence research

Animals, ISSN: 2076-2615, Vol: 12, Issue: 1
2022
  • 8
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 25
    Captures
  • 1
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    8
    • Citation Indexes
      8
  • Captures
    25
  • Mentions
    1
    • Blog Mentions
      1
      • 1

Most Recent Blog

Animals, Vol. 12, Pages 45: Systematic Map of Human–Raptor Interaction and Coexistence Research

Animals, Vol. 12, Pages 45: Systematic Map of Human–Raptor Interaction and Coexistence Research Animals doi: 10.3390/ani12010045 Authors: Angeline C. Canney Lauren M. McGough Nate A.

Review Description

Global raptor conservation relies on humans to establish and improve interaction and coexistence. Human–wildlife interaction research is well-established, but tends to focus on largebodied, terrestrial mammals. The scope and characteristics of research that explores human–raptor interactions are relatively unknown. As an initial step toward quantifying and characterizing the state of applied, cross-disciplinary literature on human–raptor interactions, we use established systematic map (scoping reviews) protocols to catalog literature and describe trends, identify gaps and biases, and critically reflect on the scope of research. We focus on the peer-reviewed (refereed) literature germane to human–raptor interaction, conflict, tolerance, acceptance, persecution and coexistence. Based on 383 papers retrieved that fit our criteria, we identified trends, biases, and gaps. These include a majority of research taking place within North America and Europe; disproportionately few interdisciplinary and social research studies; interactions focused on indirect anthropogenic mortality; and vague calls for human behavior changes, with few concrete steps suggested, when management objectives are discussed. Overall, we note a predominant focus on the study of ecological effects from human–raptor interactions rather than sociocultural causes, and suggest (as others have in various conservation contexts) the imperative of human behavioral, cultural, and political inquiry to conserve raptor species.

Bibliographic Details

Angeline C. Canney; Lauren M. McGough; Nate A. Bickford; Kenneth E. Wallen

MDPI AG

Agricultural and Biological Sciences; Veterinary

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