NSIP

Resources

Title
Predator-friendly ranching, use of electric fences, and creole cattle in the Colombian savannas
Author(s)
Valderrama-Vasquez, Carlos;Hoogesteijn, Rafael;Payán, Esteban;Quigley, Howard;Hoogesteijn, Almira
Published
2024
Publisher
European Journal of Wildlife Research
Abstract
Livestock ranching overlaps extensively with jaguar and puma distribution in the Casanare Department of east-central Colombia. Conservation programs prioritize large carnivores in the region. Ranchers retaliate by killing them in response to economic losses or fear related to their presence. Reducing retaliatory hunting is a top priority in the conservation of feline species. Predation mitigation methods (PMMs) are necessary to reduce depredation and increase tolerance for large felines. In a prospective cohort study, 16 ranches between 2017 and 2019 used electric fences (n = 14) and introduced creole cattle (n = 2) as PMMs. There was a significant difference in the risk and odds ratios between the control and treatment groups. Livestock depredation was 14.78 times higher outside PMM areas (OR, 14.78 RR, 0.069 p < 0.001) than inside such areas. The losses caused by depredation were much higher than the investments made in PMMs.
Keywords
carnivore; human wildlife conflict; predation mitigation methods; electric fences; creole cattle

Access Full Text

A full-text copy of this article may be available. Please email the WCS Library to request.




Back

PUB36205