Conservation Letters (Nov 2021)

Divergent views on trophy hunting in Africa, and what this may mean for research and policy

  • Shaya vanHoudt,
  • Richard P. Brown,
  • Thomas C. Wanger,
  • Wayne Twine,
  • Richard Fynn,
  • Kenneth Uiseb,
  • Rosie Cooney,
  • Lochran W. Traill

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/conl.12840
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 6
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Over the past decade, trophy hunting in Africa has seen increased public and scientific interest. Much of that attention has come from outside of Africa, with little emphasis on local views. We circulated an online survey through international networks to explore demographic and regional differences in opinion regards support for African trophy hunting, trophy import bans, and outside funding of conservation estates supported by hunting. We received ∼5700 responses and found that location, demography, and conservation background influenced opinion. African and North American respondents showed (significantly) more support for trophy hunting than respondents from Europe or other areas, as did respondents with conservation backgrounds. Unlike North Americans, Africans supported external subsidies of wildlife areas presently funded by hunting. Many factors affected opinions on African hunting, but respondent location played a major role. Realistic policy on African trophy hunting should thus integrate African perspectives, in particular those of rural communities.

Keywords