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Determinants of hunting and wild meat consumption in an agricultural frontier of Eastern Amazon

Grant number: 11/19108-0
Support Opportunities:Regular Research Grants
Duration: June 01, 2012 - November 30, 2014
Field of knowledge:Biological Sciences - Ecology - Applied Ecology
Principal Investigator:Renata Pardini
Grantee:Renata Pardini
Host Institution: Instituto de Biociências (IB). Universidade de São Paulo (USP). São Paulo , SP, Brazil
Associated researchers:Carla Morsello ; Toby Alan Gardner

Abstract

Wild meat is an important source of protein and monetary income for rural people. Hunting pressure, however, can negatively affect hunted animals, threatening forest integrity in the long run, and reducing the value attributed to the forest by local populations. Defining the determinants of hunting is thus crucial to conservation strategies and to guarantee food security for human populations. Hunting is influenced by multiple factors at different spatial scales, which affect supply and demand, changing the cost-benefit relationship of hunting. Frequently correlated environmental factors should define a vector of spatial variation in the cost-benefit of hunting at large scales. These factors define the supply of animals for hunting (forest cover, road network, human population density), and influence the demand for wild meat (proximity to urban areas). However, the demand for wild meat should also be affected by socioeconomic and cultural features of people at the household scale. In an agricultural frontier in Eastern Brazilian Amazon, through interviews with local people inhabiting six micro-regions that vary in distance to urban areas and in the environmental factors determining game availability, we intend to investigate: (i) the relative importance and the interactions among socioeconomic, cultural and environmental factors determining hunting and wild meat consumption; (ii) the influence of the importance of hunting and wild meat consumption on the perceptions of local people towards the forest. (AU)

Articles published in Agência FAPESP Newsletter about the research grant:
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Scientific publications (5)
(References retrieved automatically from Web of Science and SciELO through information on FAPESP grants and their corresponding numbers as mentioned in the publications by the authors)
TORRES, PATRICIA CARIGNANO; MORSELLO, CARLA; PARRY, LUKE; PARDINI, RENATA. Forest cover and social relations are more important than economic factors in driving hunting and bushmeat consumption in post-frontier Amazonia. Biological Conservation, v. 253, . (11/19108-0, 11/19606-0)
TORRES, PATRICIA CARIGNANO; MORSELLO, CARLA; PARRY, LUKE; BARLOW, JOS; FERREIRA, JOICE; GARDNER, TOBY; PARDINI, RENATA. Landscape correlates of bushmeat consumption and hunting in a post-frontier Amazonian region. ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION, v. 45, n. 4, p. 315-323, . (11/19108-0, 11/19606-0)
GARDNER, TOBY A.; FERREIRA, JOICE; BARLOW, JOS; LEES, ALEXANDER C.; PARRY, LUKE; GUIMARAES VIEIRA, IMA CELIA; BERENGUER, ERIKA; ABRAMOVAY, RICARDO; ALEIXO, ALEXANDRE; ANDRETTI, CHRISTIAN; et al. A social and ecological assessment of tropical land uses at multiple scales: the Sustainable Amazon Network. PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, v. 368, n. 1619, SI, . (11/19108-0)
TORRES, PATRICIA CARIGNANO; MORSELLO, CARLA; PARRY, LUKE; PARDINI, RENATA. Who Cares about Forests and Why? Individual Values Attributed to Forests in a Post-Frontier Region in Amazonia. PLoS One, v. 11, n. 12, . (11/19108-0, 11/19606-0)
GARDNER, TOBY A.; FERREIRA, JOICE; BARLOW, JOS; LEES, ALEXANDER C.; PARRY, LUKE; GUIMARAES VIEIRA, IMA CELIA; BERENGUER, ERIKA; ABRAMOVAY, RICARDO; ALEIXO, ALEXANDRE; ANDRETTI, CHRISTIAN; et al. A social and ecological assessment of tropical land uses at multiple scales: the Sustainable Amazon Network. PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, v. 368, n. 1619, p. 11-pg., . (11/19108-0)

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