Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-qsmjn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-17T22:28:24.080Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Socio-economic consequences of cattle predation by the Endangered Persian leopard Panthera pardus saxicolor in a Caucasian conflict hotspot, northern Iran

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 December 2015

Sima Babrgir*
Affiliation:
Iranian Cheetah Society, PO Box 14155-8549, Tehran, Iran
Mohammad S. Farhadinia*
Affiliation:
Iranian Cheetah Society, PO Box 14155-8549, Tehran, Iran
Ehsan M. Moqanaki
Affiliation:
Iranian Cheetah Society, PO Box 14155-8549, Tehran, Iran
*
(Corresponding author) E-mail babrgir@gmail.com
(Corresponding author) E-mail msfarhadinia@wildlife.ir
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

In the Caucasus the Endangered Persian leopard Panthera pardus saxicolor has been persecuted to the verge of extinction, primarily as a result of conflict with people over livestock predation. The socio-economic factors that influence this interaction have received little attention and the attitudes of local people towards leopards remain unknown. Here we assess the extent of cattle predation by leopards and how this influences people's attitudes towards leopards among village residents around the Dorfak No-Hunting Area, a priority reserve in the Iranian Caucasus. In a survey of 66 households, 48% of interviewees reported losing cattle to leopards during 2009–2011. A mean of c. 0.7 head of cattle per interviewed household was reportedly killed by leopards over the 3-year survey period. Cattle predation peaked during warm seasons, when most family members were busy with rice farming-related activities, thus leaving their cattle grazing unguarded in the forest. Regardless of the intensity of cattle predation or socio-economic status, 80% of respondents perceived leopards as a pest, with 45% of interviewees expressing support for either licensed hunting or culling of the Dorfak leopards. We recommend that the Iranian government considers the financial consequences of livestock loss for poor rural communities across the leopard's range. In addition, a combination of different livestock husbandry practices, with the direct involvement of local residents, is essential to ensure the long-term survival of the regional leopard population of the Caucasus.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna & Flora International 2015 

Introduction

Wild carnivores have been persecuted as pests throughout history, either in direct retaliation for livestock predation or through precautionary, government-sponsored attempts at extermination (Thirgood et al., Reference Thirgood, Woodroffe, Rabinowitz, Woodroffe, Thirgood and Rabinowitz2005; Loveridge et al., Reference Loveridge, Wang, Frank, Seidensticker, Macdonald and Loveridge2010; Rigg et al., Reference Rigg, Finďo, Wechselberger, Gorman, Sillero-Zubiri and Macdonald2011). The underlying factors leading to the persecution of large predators are complex and are also linked to local perceptions and cultural values (Zimmermann et al., Reference Zimmermann, Walpole and Leader-Williams2005; Treves & Bruskotter, Reference Treves and Bruskotter2014). In rural communities where livestock has high economic and social importance and is an important source of income, livestock losses affect local attitudes towards, and acceptance of, large carnivores (Zimmermann et al., Reference Zimmermann, Walpole and Leader-Williams2005; Dar et al., Reference Dar, Minhas, Zaman and Linkie2009; Amador-Alcalá et al., Reference Amador-Alcalá, Naranjoa and Jiménez-Ferrera2013). Understanding the factors that contribute to the complexity of conflict issues is crucial if conservationists are to facilitate the development of appropriate mitigation strategies (Dickman et al., Reference Dickman, Marchini, Manfredo, Macdonald and Willis2013).

The Persian leopard Panthera pardus saxicolor, categorized as Endangered on the IUCN Red List (Khorozyan, Reference Khorozyan2008), is one of the least-studied subspecies of leopard, inhabiting a wide range of montane habitats in West and Central Asia. Iran is a stronghold for leopards in the region, and reportedly acts as a source for small and highly threatened leopard subpopulations in the Caucasus Ecoregion (Khorozyan, Reference Khorozyan2008). Wild ungulate populations have been depleted in the Iranian Caucasus, and people and their livestock now dominate the landscape (Moqanaki et al., Reference Moqanaki, Breitenmoser, Kiabi, Masoud and Bensch2013), making leopard–livestock conflict inevitable. Despite this conflict, these interactions have received very little attention and there has been no assessment of public attitudes towards the Persian leopard. In particular, such studies are needed in protected areas as inadequate understanding of the ecological and social aspects of conflict may hinder the success of any management practices (Loveridge et al., Reference Loveridge, Wang, Frank, Seidensticker, Macdonald and Loveridge2010).

Post-revolution Iran, with a human population that almost doubled between 1980 and 2000, has experienced a profound socio-demographic change from a primarily agricultural nation to an urbanized, developing country. This development has widened the urban–rural gap, making rural communities more vulnerable to the country's relatively poor economic performance (Mojtahed & Esfahani, Reference Mojtahed and Esfahani1989; Mazarei, Reference Mazarei1996). Those living within such fragile local economies rarely tolerate the financial risk associated with coexistence with large carnivores, and rural residents often take lethal measures against any conflict species (Hemson et al., Reference Hemson, Maclennan, Mills, Johnson and Macdonald2009; Amador-Alcalá et al., Reference Amador-Alcalá, Naranjoa and Jiménez-Ferrera2013).

Our goal in this study was to investigate the extent of cattle predation by Persian leopards and to assess the intensity of conflict between rural residents and leopards in a conflict hotspot in the Iranian Caucasus. We aimed to determine the degree of tolerance towards leopards where cattle losses occur, and how predation intensity shapes people's perceptions and attitudes to interventions related to leopard conservation. We anticipated that a high intensity of cattle predation by leopards would be the main cause of any negative attitudes towards and low tolerance of leopards. Our results are intended to contribute to a better understanding of the socio-economic factors involved in livestock predation by the Persian leopard, and to provide insights for conflict management in the human-dominated habitats of the Caucasus Ecoregion.

Study area

Located in the northern foothills of the Alborz Mountains, along the southern Caspian coast (Fig. 1), the Dorfak No-Hunting Area is a priority leopard reserve for the Caucasus Ecoregion. With an area of c. 379 km2, the Area has a significant representation of Hyrcanian mixed forests (90% cover). The remainder of the reserve and surrounding area is mainly dominated by agricultural lands and grazing pastures. There are an estimated 3,063 people (in 796 households) living in 61 villages inside and along the periphery of the Area. By the early 2000s c. 40% of villages formerly located within the Area were relocated outside the reserve as part of a national plan to protect Iran's remnant forests against overgrazing by livestock.

Fig. 1 Villages close to the northern perimeter of the Dorfak No-Hunting Area, where a questionnaire survey was conducted to obtain data on leopard–cattle conflict and local people's attitudes towards the Persian leopard Panthera pardus saxicolor.

Methods

Selection of villages

A reconnaissance questionnaire survey of the local wildlife authority and wardens of Dorfak No-Hunting Area revealed that people living along the northern perimeter of the reserve (Fig. 1) routinely complain about losing cattle to leopards. We therefore prioritized for investigation the eight villages in this area that had the highest number of cattle-loss claims during 2009–2011 (Fig. 1). The majority of rural residents were farmers and most families possessed poultry and cattle. Cattle are considered a source of wealth for these rural communities. Male cattle are raised for sale as meat whereas females are usually kept for dairy production and breeding. Animal husbandry practices are generally similar throughout the eight villages: cattle are driven up to 5 km from the village to graze in the forest during the warmer season (March–September), returning on their own each night to corrals within the village. These corrals also serve as permanent shelters during the colder season (October–February), when the cattle are fed on hay or rice foliage collected during the summer.

Questionnaire survey

During February–March 2012 we conducted a semi-structured questionnaire survey (Supplementary Material 1) to obtain data on leopard–cattle conflict and the perceptions and attitudes of local people towards the leopard. Prior to data collection all team members received training based on guidelines for interview-based surveys developed from similar studies (e.g. Zimmermann et al., Reference Zimmermann, Walpole and Leader-Williams2005; Majic & Bath, Reference Majic and Bath2010). We tried to interview primarily the head or spouse of randomly-selected households, but other family members often participated. We were therefore able to cross-check and validate the interview data and record a collective response. We conducted unstructured interviews in a friendly environment, to gain the trust of interviewees and to avoid bias. We evaluated respondents’ ability to identify the leopard by showing them photographs of different predators.

The questionnaire had four sections: (1) demographic and socio-economic characteristics of respondent, and the number and insurance status of the household's cattle; (2) experience of cattle being predated by leopards; (3) an exploration of the respondent's knowledge about leopard ecology (as perception of a species can considerably influence human–animal interactions; Lescureux et al., Reference Lescureux, Linnell, Mustafa, Melovski, Stojanov and Ivanov2011; Dickman et al., Reference Dickman, Marchini, Manfredo, Macdonald and Willis2013); (4) attitudes towards the leopard and leopard conservation. To assess the intensity of damage, past experiences of leopard attacks on cattle were obtained (date, location, and frequency of losses) based on what the respondents remembered from the previous 3 years (2009–2011). We investigated local people's attitudes using a series of statements regarding the leopard and its conservation, and responses were recorded on a three-point scale (agree, unsure and disagree).

Statistical analysis

We used descriptive statistics for all demographic and attitudinal questions. We combined the answers to all attitude statements into a single additive score (Walpole & Goodwin, Reference Walpole and Goodwin2001; Zimmermann et al., Reference Zimmermann, Walpole and Leader-Williams2005). We coded answers to each question from zero to two (negative, unsure, positive), and summed the codes to create a combined score of 0–14, with higher scores indicating a more positive overall attitude to leopards. Similarly, we calculated an overall ‘conservation attitude’ score of 0–12 from six statements (Supplementary Material 1).

We used multiple linear regression to examine the importance of age, gender and percentage of cattle loss as predictors of attitude. We used Pearson product-moment correlation analysis to explore associations between the combined score and the number of cattle owned by respondents and predated by leopards. We conducted all analyses in R v. 3.2.2 (R Development Core Team, 2015).

We used Correspondence Analysis (Benzecri, Reference Benzecri1992) to assess the impact of predation patterns on the attitudes of respondents. Correspondence Analysis explores correspondence between variables in order to explain the most variance in the model in the least number of dimensions (Doey & Kurta, Reference Doey and Kurta2011). We implemented Correspondence Analysis with PAST v. 2.17c (Hammer et al., Reference Hammer, Harper and Ryan2001), which uses symmetric scaling (Benzecri scaling). We prepared the data matrix with respondents as rows and their attitude towards leopards as variables/columns. We grouped respondents by intensity of conflict (each defined as a convex hull), which we defined as the percentage of the household's cattle killed by leopards in the preceding year (convex hull).

Results

Respondent demographics and cattle holding

We interviewed a total of 66 households (corresponding to 25.1% of the total number of households in the surveyed villages) as follows: Gavcool: 7 (11.7% of the total number of households); Gile-Bam: 9 (26.5%); Eshkerab: 5 (22.7%); Rudbar Sara: 5 (29.4%); Doldim: 9 (5.4%); Liafo: 24 (47.1%); Golestan Sara: 3 (17.6%); Gord Kuh: 4 (25.0%). The respondents were aged 18–70 years (mean 44.6 ± SE 1.7), and gender ratio was almost equal (34 male vs 32 female). Rice farming was the main occupation of the respondents. Cattle are regarded as assets in their own right, but 94% of the interviewees also herded cattle to meet the dairy needs of the family. With the exception of one respondent who owned an exceptionally large herd of cattle (n = 48), livestock consisted of small to medium herds of cattle (1–25, mean 7.0 ± SE 0.9).

Cattle predation by leopards

Overall, predation by leopards was reportedly the major cause (57.6%) of cattle loss for the surveyed households, followed by disease (24.7%), theft (8.2%), birth-related problems (8.2%), and unknown causes (1.2%). Forty-eight percent of respondents suffered loss of cattle to leopards during 2009–2011. Cattle predation peaked during the warm season (i.e. March–September; 72%), and in total 49 head of cattle were reported killed by leopards. A mean of 0.7 ± SE 0.1 cattle per surveyed household were killed by leopards during 2009–2011, and 27 (55.1%) of the reported losses occurred in 2011. None of the respondents had any form of livestock insurance for their cattle and 53.0% of them stated they were not aware of any compensation schemes. Only 67% of respondents expressed willingness to receive financial compensation for cattle killed by leopards.

Knowledge and perceptions of leopards

The majority of respondents correctly identified leopard pictures and signs of leopard predation. Leopards were well-known by 69.2% of the interviewed residents although only 15.4% of respondents claimed to have encountered the species in the wild. Just over half (51.5%) of respondents believed that a large population of leopards lives in the nearby Dorfak No-Hunting Area, with a minimum population size of 10, and 56.1% maintained that the number of leopards has recently increased in the Area because ‘the Department of Environment has released domesticated leopards into the forest’ and ‘it is why the animal tends to approach our villages and cattle’. The reproductive rate of leopards was also considered to be high and even ‘comparable to that of dogs’ (2–4 cubs on a yearly basis) according to 63.6% of respondents. Sixty-six percent of interviewees reported cattle to be the main food of leopards in the area, expressing that ‘nothing is left for leopards to eat except [wild] pigs, but hunting cattle is much easier for them’. They believed that ‘in spring and during the growth of leaves, the number of leopards increases and they attack people's cattle more frequently’. Respondents considered the leopard to be a ‘bloodthirsty predator that attacks cattle's necks and just drinks their blood’. Only three respondents (4.5%) mentioned rumours of leopards attacking humans, and all referred to a single incident that allegedly occurred in summer 2011. Respondents also mentioned that ‘there is no way to save cattle against leopards; even guarding dogs are ineffective as leopards eat dogs as well’.

Conservation attitudes

Combined values for leopard attitude scores ranged from 4 (negative) to 14 (positive), with a mean score of 7.5 ± SE 0.2 per person, suggesting an overall neutral attitude towards leopards. Combined values for the conservation attitude scores were 0–10 (mean 6.4 ± SE 0.2). Most respondents (80%) said that leopards cause damage to cattle, and 36% perceived them as a threat to people (Table 1). Forty-eight percent of respondents believed that it is not necessary for leopard conservation to have leopards in Dorfak No-Hunting Area as the predator exists in other parts of Iran. Forty-five percent of respondents agreed that the hunting of leopards should be allowed within a specific season as an effective management tool (Table 1). During 2009–2011, only one verifiable record of leopard poaching was obtained (an adult male). A juvenile female was also found dead in 2011 in a snare trap installed for wild pigs Sus scrofa near a rice farm.

Table 1 Percentage of responses in agreement with statements about the Persian leopard Panthera pardus saxicolor and leopard conservation in the Dorfak No-Hunting Area, Iran (see Supplementary Material 1 for details).

Factors influencing attitudes towards leopards

There was no evidence that the number of cattle owned and the number of loss claims were related (r = 0.19, df = 63, P = 0.12). Nor was there evidence that the composite leopard attitude and conservation metric was related to the intensity of cattle predation by leopards (r = 0.09, df = 63, P = 0.48 and r = 0.05, df = 63, P = 0.69, respectively; Fig. 2a). We found no relationship between the combined attitude scores and interviewee age classes (F 3, 61 = 1.909, P = 0.14 and F 3, 61 = 0.175, P = 0.91, respectively; Fig. 2b). However, men tended to show higher mean scores (more positive attitudes) than women (F 1, 61 = 4.87, P = 0.031; Fig. 2c). The first three axes of the Correspondence Analysis model explained 72.1% of the total variance (i.e. the intensity of leopard predation explains 72.1% of the variance in the patterns of respondents' attitudes towards the leopard; Table 2). The four overlapping convex hulls that denote the different levels of cattle predation (Fig. 3) suggest that respondents generally share similar attitudes towards leopards, regardless of the intensity of cattle predation (Fig. 2a).

Fig. 2 Respondents’ attitudes towards leopards based on: (a) intensity of cattle loss to leopards, (b) respondents’ age groups, and (c) respondents’ gender. Each error bar shows the mean of the variable ± SE.

Fig. 3 A biplot from the Correspondence Analysis displaying various respondents’ attitudes to leopards and how they are related to the specific groups experiencing various levels of cattle predation by the leopards (each group is shown as a convex hull). All four convex hulls show high overlap in attitudes between various respondent groups. See text for details.

Table 2 Results of the Correspondence Analysis, with the eigenvalues and percentage of variance explained by the first three axes, and the contribution of the seven respondents' attitude variables to each of the axes.

1 Reflects how well each of the variables loads onto each of the axes

Discussion

Our study revealed that almost half of the surveyed households had lost cattle to leopards within the study period, and this was one of the highest levels of human–leopard conflict across the species’ range (Dar et al., Reference Dar, Minhas, Zaman and Linkie2009; Stein et al., Reference Stein, Fuller, Damery, Sievert and Marker2010; Kabir et al., Reference Kabir, Ghoddousi, Awan and Awan2014). The surveyed households showed a generally non-positive attitude towards leopards and leopard conservation; their inaccurate understanding of leopard biology and behaviour may also contribute to their low tolerance. Raising public awareness may increase tolerance of carnivores through changing local attitudes (Zimmermann et al., Reference Zimmermann, Walpole and Leader-Williams2005; Dickman et al., Reference Dickman, Marchini, Manfredo, Macdonald and Willis2013). However, this alone would not mitigate the current level of leopard conflict in our study area because of the extremely high cost of cattle loss to villagers. Unlike situations where economic loss to livestock keepers is primarily attributed to disease and thus improved husbandry and veterinary care are prioritized (e.g. Dar et al., Reference Dar, Minhas, Zaman and Linkie2009), the high proportion of cattle loss attributed to leopards in our study area suggests that the mitigation of human–leopard conflict is a priority.

Providing economic incentives to compensate rural communities for damage caused by wildlife is among the most popular responses to mitigate human–carnivore conflict (Hemson et al., Reference Hemson, Maclennan, Mills, Johnson and Macdonald2009; Dickman et al., Reference Dickman, Macdonald and Macdonald2011). Implementing a carefully designed compensation programme in parallel with close monitoring of the system has great potential for facilitating human–carnivore coexistence (Persson et al., Reference Persson, Rauset and Chapron2015). There are two state-run financial schemes for compensating livestock breeders in Iran: (1) the livestock insurance compensation scheme offered by the Agriculture Bank of Iran and (2) wildlife conflict compensation scheme administrated through the Department of Environment. Not only were none of the respondents’ cattle insured but the majority of owners were unaware of the schemes. Nonetheless, the majority of respondents were unwilling to report predator-caused cattle losses to the local wildlife authority, a prerequisite for applying for economic compensation under either of the available schemes. The main reason was that legal procedures to document these claims are too extensive and often do not lead to any financial compensation. Furthermore, respondents felt that making a claim could result in the complainant being a suspect if human-caused leopard mortality were to arise. The lack of awareness about compensation programmes, the misconceptions about the role of government and the wildlife management authority, and the long administrative process that results in delayed payments, all discourage rural livestock breeders from participating in existing compensation schemes (Loveridge et al., Reference Loveridge, Wang, Frank, Seidensticker, Macdonald and Loveridge2010; Rigg et al., Reference Rigg, Finďo, Wechselberger, Gorman, Sillero-Zubiri and Macdonald2011; Karanth et al., Reference Karanth, Gopalaswamy, Prasad and Dasgupta2013). For the long-term conservation of globally iconic but locally problematic species it is critical that the strategies that are developed and implemented outweigh the local costs incurred (Dickman et al., Reference Dickman, Marchini, Manfredo, Macdonald and Willis2013). We therefore recommend that the Department of Environment evaluates the two existing compensation schemes, in which false claiming and verification costs are considered, against well-established alternative approaches (e.g. conservation performance payments; Persson et al., Reference Persson, Rauset and Chapron2015).

Taken in isolation, providing economic incentives might be insufficient to guarantee the co-existence of people and conflict carnivores. Our study area was characterized by very poor cattle husbandry, lacking even traditional methods such as livestock guarding by shepherds and guard dogs. Husbandry practices can significantly influence the risk of livestock predation by large carnivores (Ogada et al., Reference Ogada, Oguge, Woodroffe and Frank2003; Stein et al., Reference Stein, Fuller, Damery, Sievert and Marker2010). We suggest that attentive cattle husbandry along with simple changes to existing practices have the potential to reduce leopard attacks on cattle. Accordingly, parallel to increasing the transparency of the current compensation schemes, a top priority is to develop an overall comprehensive husbandry management programme with locally affordable and appropriate husbandry practices.

When appropriate management strategies are adopted, carnivores can co-exist with humans (López-Bao et al., Reference López-Bao, Kaczensky, Linnell, Boitani and Chapron2015). If Iran's leopard population is to be an important resource for securing the long-term survival of the small leopard populations in the Caucasus Ecoregion (Khorozyan, Reference Khorozyan2008; Moqanaki et al., Reference Moqanaki, Breitenmoser, Kiabi, Masoud and Bensch2013) it is crucial that an understanding of human–leopard interactions will be incorporated into the current conservation initiatives, to increase local tolerance towards leopards and improve both leopard and wider conservation. Applying a combination of approaches that involve local people who have a key role in the fate of the local leopard population would be a sustainable long-term solution for leopard conservation in the human-dominated habitats of the Caucasus. We have presented our results and recommendations to decision makers and local stakeholders in a detailed report of the project outcomes (see Babrgir et al., Reference Babrgir, Bagheri and Soleymani2014, for the English version). We have focused our attention on addressing the underlying conflict using a human–leopard coexistence framework (Redpath et al., Reference Redpath, Bhatia and Young2015). We consider that only a locally sustainable mitigation scheme in an institutionally and environmentally dynamic context would benefit all parties, notwithstanding our specific interest in conservation of the Endangered Persian leopard.

Acknowledgements

Funding for this study was generously provided by the People's Trust for Endangered Species. Gilan Provincial Office of the Iran Department of Environment and its branch in Siahkal are thanked for their cooperation, and S. Bagheri, S. Zavaran-Hosseini, Y. Hassan-Beigi and local wardens for assistance in the study area. We are grateful to G. Goldthorpe, L. Bahaa-el-Din, P. J. Johnson, and anonymous reviewers for helpful comments, and to P. Behnoud for his contribution in preparing Figure 3.

Biographical sketches

Sima Babrgir is interested is in human–wildlife conflict mitigation and community-based conservation. Mohammad S. Farhadinia is a conservation biologist with an interest in the dynamic interactions between carnivores and their ecosystems, including human communities. Ehsan M. Moqanaki's research interest is in the application of non-invasive techniques for a better understanding of the ecology and conservation of wildlife populations.

References

Amador-Alcalá, S., Naranjoa, E.J. & Jiménez-Ferrera, G. (2013) Wildlife predation on livestock and poultry: implications for predator conservation in the rainforest of south-east Mexico. Oryx, 47, 243250.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Babrgir, S., Bagheri, S. & Soleymani, M. (2014) Capacity Building of Local Communities to Conserve the Persian Leopard in the Caucasus Eco-region. Final report to the People's Trust for Endangered Species, UK, 80 pp. Http://ptes.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/Iran-persian-leopard-in-caucasus-eco-region-final-report.pdf [accessed 5 September 2015].Google Scholar
Benzecri, J.P. (1992) Correspondence Analysis Handbook. Marcel Decker, New York, USA.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dar, N.I., Minhas, R.A., Zaman, Q. & Linkie, M. (2009) Predicting the patterns, perceptions and causes of human–carnivore conflict in and around Machiara National Park, Pakistan. Biological Conservation, 10, 20762082.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dickman, A., Macdonald, E. & Macdonald, D. (2011) A review of financial instruments to pay for predator conservation and encourage human–carnivore coexistence. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 108, 1393713944.Google Scholar
Dickman, A., Marchini, S. & Manfredo, M. (2013) The human dimension in addressing conflict with large carnivores. In Key Topics in Conservation Biology 2 (eds Macdonald, D.W. & Willis, K.J.), pp. 110126. John Wiley & Sons, Oxford, UK.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Doey, L. & Kurta, J. (2011) Correspondence Analysis applied to psychological research. Tutorials in Quantitative Methods for Psychology, 7, 514.Google Scholar
Hammer, Ø., Harper, D.A.T. & Ryan, P.D. (2001) PAST: paleontological statistics software package for education and data analysis. Palaeontologia Electronica, 4, 9.Google Scholar
Hemson, G., Maclennan, S., Mills, G., Johnson, P. & Macdonald, D. (2009) Community, lions, livestock and money: a spatial and social analysis of attitudes to wildlife and the conservation value of tourism in a human–carnivore conflict in Botswana. Biological Conservation, 142, 27182725.Google Scholar
Kabir, M., Ghoddousi, A., Awan, M.S. & Awan, M.N. (2014) Assessment of human–leopard conflict in Machiara National Park, Azad Jammu and Kashmir, Pakistan. European Journal of Wildlife Research, 60, 291296.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Karanth, K.K., Gopalaswamy, A.M., Prasad, P.K. & Dasgupta, S. (2013) Patterns of human–wildlife conflicts and compensation: insights from Western Ghats protected areas. Biological Conservation, 166, 175185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khorozyan, I. (2008) Panthera pardus saxicolor. In IUCN Red List of Threatened Species v. 2015.2. Http://www.iucnredlist.org [accessed 4 September 2015].Google Scholar
Lescureux, N., Linnell, J.D.C., Mustafa, S., Melovski, D., Stojanov, A., Ivanov, G. et al. (2011) Fear of the unknown: local knowledge and perceptions of the Eurasian lynx Lynx lynx in western Macedonia. Oryx, 45, 600607.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
López-Bao, J.V., Kaczensky, P., Linnell, J.D., Boitani, L. & Chapron, G. (2015) Carnivore coexistence: wilderness not required. Science, 348, 871872.Google Scholar
Loveridge, A.J., Wang, S.W., Frank, L.G. & Seidensticker, J. (2010) People and wild felids: conservation of cats and management of conflicts. In Biology and Conservation of Wild Felids (eds Macdonald, D.W. & Loveridge, A.J.), pp. 161195. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK.Google Scholar
Majic, A. & Bath, A.J. (2010) Changes in attitudes toward wolves in Croatia. Biological Conservation, 143, 255260.Google Scholar
Mazarei, A. (1996) The Iranian economy under Islamic Republic: institutional change and macroeconomic performance (1979–1990). Cambridge Journal of Economics, 20, 289314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mojtahed, A. & Esfahani, H.S. (1989) Agricultural policy and performance in Iran: the post-revolutionary experience. World Development, 17, 839860.Google Scholar
Moqanaki, E.M., Breitenmoser, U., Kiabi, B.H., Masoud, M. & Bensch, S. (2013) Persian leopards in the Iranian Caucasus: a sinking ‘source’ population? Cat News, 59, 2225.Google Scholar
Ogada, M.O., Oguge, N.O., Woodroffe, R. & Frank, L.G. (2003) Limiting depredation by African carnivores: the role of livestock husbandry. Conservation Biology, 17, 15211530.Google Scholar
Persson, J., Rauset, G.R. & Chapron, G. (2015) Paying for an endangered predator leads to population recovery. Conservation Letters, 8, 345350.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
R Development Core Team (2015) R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria. Http://www.R-project.org [accessed 25 August 2015].Google Scholar
Redpath, S.R., Bhatia, S. & Young, J. (2015) Tilting at wildlife: reconsidering human–wildlife conflict. Oryx, 49, 222225.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rigg, R., Finďo, S., Wechselberger, M., Gorman, M.L., Sillero-Zubiri, C. & Macdonald, D.W. (2011) Mitigating carnivore–livestock conflict in Europe: lessons from Slovakia. Oryx, 45, 272280 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stein, A.B., Fuller, T.K., Damery, D.T., Sievert, L. & Marker, L.L. (2010) Farm management and economic analyses of leopard conservation in north-central Namibia. Animal Conservation, 13, 419427.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thirgood, S., Woodroffe, R. & Rabinowitz, A. (2005) The impact of human–wildlife conflict on human lives and livelihoods. In People and Wildlife, Conflict or Coexistence? (eds Woodroffe, R., Thirgood, S. & Rabinowitz, A.), pp. 1326. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Treves, A. & Bruskotter, J.T. (2014) Tolerance for predatory wildlife. Science, 344, 476477.Google Scholar
Walpole, M.J. & Goodwin, H.J. (2001) Local attitudes towards conservation and tourism around Komodo National Park, Indonesia. Environmental Conservation, 28, 160166.Google Scholar
Zimmermann, A., Walpole, M.J. & Leader-Williams, N. (2005) Cattle ranchers’ attitudes to conflicts with jaguar Panthera onca in the Pantanal of Brazil. Oryx, 39, 406412.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Villages close to the northern perimeter of the Dorfak No-Hunting Area, where a questionnaire survey was conducted to obtain data on leopard–cattle conflict and local people's attitudes towards the Persian leopard Panthera pardus saxicolor.

Figure 1

Table 1 Percentage of responses in agreement with statements about the Persian leopard Panthera pardus saxicolor and leopard conservation in the Dorfak No-Hunting Area, Iran (see Supplementary Material 1 for details).

Figure 2

Fig. 2 Respondents’ attitudes towards leopards based on: (a) intensity of cattle loss to leopards, (b) respondents’ age groups, and (c) respondents’ gender. Each error bar shows the mean of the variable ± SE.

Figure 3

Fig. 3 A biplot from the Correspondence Analysis displaying various respondents’ attitudes to leopards and how they are related to the specific groups experiencing various levels of cattle predation by the leopards (each group is shown as a convex hull). All four convex hulls show high overlap in attitudes between various respondent groups. See text for details.

Figure 4

Table 2 Results of the Correspondence Analysis, with the eigenvalues and percentage of variance explained by the first three axes, and the contribution of the seven respondents' attitude variables to each of the axes.

Supplementary material: File

Babrgir supplementary material S1

A questionnaire

Download Babrgir supplementary material S1(File)
File 260 KB