A Framework to Evaluate Wildlife Feeding in Research, Wildlife Management, Tourism and Recreation
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Types of Wildlife Feeding: Motivations and Outcomes
2.1. Motivations for Feeding Wildlife
2.2. Types of Wildlife Feeding and Outcomes
2.2.1. Research Feeding
2.2.2. Management Feeding
2.2.3. Tourism Feeding
2.2.4. Opportunistic Feeding
3. British Columbia, Canada—A Case Study of Feeding Wildlife to Death
4. Framework for Evaluating Feeding
Factors (C, E, W) | Research | Management | Tourism | Opportunistic |
---|---|---|---|---|
C: feasible to regulate/monitor/intervene | + + | + | − | − − |
C: safe for the public | + + | + | − * | − * |
E: contributes to understanding the species | + + | + | + | − |
E: contributes to saving endangered species | + | + + | − | − |
E: contributes to population survival | + * | + * | − | − |
E: does not facilitate poaching or disease | + | − * | − | − * |
E: contributes to public education | N/A | N/A | +/− ** | + * |
E: provides economic benefits | N/A | + | +/− ** | − |
W: effects relatively few animals | + + | + | − ** | − − |
W: does not cause physiological stress to animal | + | + | − * | − * |
W: does not cause physical harm to animal | + | − * | − * | − * |
W: affects only a small portion of lifespan | + + | + | − − * | − − * |
W: does not disrupt natural foraging | + | − | − − * | − − * |
Feeding activity example | Ability to be controlled | Beneficial conservation effect | Positive long-term effect on animal welfare | Feeding acceptable? |
---|---|---|---|---|
Research | ||||
Northern Goshawk study [36] | + + | + | + | Yes |
Townsend’s Chipmunk study [37] | + + | + | + | Yes |
Woodland bird study [38] | + + | + | + | Yes |
Management | ||||
Kestrel species recovery [42] | + + | + + | + + | Yes |
Winter deer feeding [57,58,59] | − | − | − | No |
Boar baiting [60] | − | − − | − − | No |
Tourism | ||||
Dolphin feeding [74] | − | − | − | No |
Primate feeding [61] | − | − | − | No |
Bear feeding [62] | − | − | − | No |
Komodo dragon feeding [63] | − | − | − | No |
Shark feeding [79] | + / −* | + | − | Yes * |
Opportunistic | ||||
Backyard bear feeding [31] | − − | − − | − | No |
Backyard bird feeding [17] | − | + | Neutral | Yes ** |
Dingo feeding [90] | − | − − | − | No |
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References and Notes
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Dubois, S.; Fraser, D. A Framework to Evaluate Wildlife Feeding in Research, Wildlife Management, Tourism and Recreation. Animals 2013, 3, 978-994. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani3040978
Dubois S, Fraser D. A Framework to Evaluate Wildlife Feeding in Research, Wildlife Management, Tourism and Recreation. Animals. 2013; 3(4):978-994. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani3040978
Chicago/Turabian StyleDubois, Sara, and David Fraser. 2013. "A Framework to Evaluate Wildlife Feeding in Research, Wildlife Management, Tourism and Recreation" Animals 3, no. 4: 978-994. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani3040978
APA StyleDubois, S., & Fraser, D. (2013). A Framework to Evaluate Wildlife Feeding in Research, Wildlife Management, Tourism and Recreation. Animals, 3(4), 978-994. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani3040978