Global Ecology and Conservation (Jun 2023)

Hunting skills and ethnobiological knowledge among the young, educated Papua New Guineans: Implications for conservation

  • Alfred Kik,
  • Pavel Duda,
  • Jarmila Bajzekova,
  • Nigel Baro,
  • Redley Opasa,
  • Gibson Sosanika,
  • Leonardo R. Jorge,
  • Paige West,
  • Katerina Sam,
  • Jan Zrzavy,
  • Vojtech Novotny

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 43
p. e02435

Abstract

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Hunting, as a component of traditional indigenous livelihoods, can play either positive or negative role in biodiversity conservation by maintaining traditional lifestyles that are conducive to conservation or by endangering vulnerable hunted species. Quantitative data on changes in hunting skills in indigenous communities driven by education, employment, and other lifestyle changes are lacking. Here we assess hunting skills of young people in Papua New Guinea (PNG). We use a sample of 7818 secondary school students, representing 15% of the most educated individuals in their age cohort. Students self-assessed their hunting skills as none (34% of respondents), poor (46%), and good (20%). Male students reported significantly higher hunting skills than female students. Hunting skills were positively correlated with knowledge of local bird species and with other traditional skills (growing food, using medicinal plants, building houses). They were negatively correlated with math and English skills, as well as with the transportation accessibility of the village/town where the students grew up. Students who grow up in town reported significantly lower hunting skills than those who grew up in village. These results show that students' hunting skills are already low, and the trends in their socio-cultural drivers predict a further decline in the future. The increasing disconnection from the natural environment and the declining attractiveness of hunting as prestigious activity for the young and educated people are part of a broader trend of loss of ethnobiological knowledge in PNG's indigenous communities. While it may reduce hunting pressure on some endangered species, it may also remove traditional incentives for conservation in rainforest-dwelling communities.

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