Wildlife and human safety in the Tarangire ecosystem, Tanzania
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Coexistence of people and wildlife outside protected areas is of critical conservation importance. However,
human-wildlife interactions on shared landscapes can produce negative outcomes for wildlife populations and
people. This article focuses on the effects of wildlife on local people’s lived experiences of physical safety in the
Tarangire ecosystem of northern Tanzania. The Tarangire ecosystem supports a diverse array of wildlife species
of global conservation significance, encompassing several national parks, community-based conservation areas,
forest reserves, and trophy hunting blocks. From the perspectives of local agropastoral Maasai communities,
coexisting with wildlife is a routine part of everyday life, though some species are dangerous and pose threats to
physical safety. These human security concerns compound the economic impacts of wildlife on local livelihoods,
manifest in the forms of crop raiding, livestock depredation, and property damage. Based on mixed qualitative
methods including ethnographic fieldwork (2019–2020; 2022; 2023), participant observation, household surveys
(n = 1076), and in-depth interviews (n = 240), this paper identifies the species of particular concern to
communities. Elephants, spotted hyenas, buffalo, and lions pose significant threats to human security. Venomous
snakes and leopards are also safety concerns, but to a lesser degree. The anthropological dimensions of these
threats to physical safety are underrepresented in the literature on human-wildlife conflict. This paper spotlights
three recent incidents of people being killed by wildlife (elephant, hyena, and lion) in the area, and the psychosocial
consequences that have since rippled across local communities. People expressed feelings of fear,
resentment, anger, grief, and insecurity born of their experiences coexisting with large nondomestic mammals.
Wildlife attacks on people engender material and emotional impacts with traumatic aftereffects. These human
dimensions of wildlife are significant for equity reasons in and of themselves, and also for environmental sustainability
as they affect people’s tolerance for living with wildlife. Greater attention to the lived experiences of local people is
needed to improve conservation practice in northern Tanzania
Description
Open access article. Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International license (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) applies
Keywords
Human-wildlife conflict, Human security, Wildlife, Large carnivores, Elephants, Tanzania, Safety, Human-wildlife coexistence, Human dimensions of wildlife, Anthropology, Ethnography, East Africa, Community-based conservation, Tolerance, Attitudes, Equity, Sustainability, Ecological connectivity, Maasai
Citation
Raycraft, J. (2023). Wildlife and human safety in the Tarangire ecosystem, Tanzania. Trees, Forests and People, 13, Article 100418. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tfp.2023.100418