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A future for all: the need for human-wildlife coexistence

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Gland World Wide Fund for Nature 2021Description: 102pSubject(s): Online resources: Summary: This joint report reveals that globally, conflict-related killing affects more than 75% of the world’s wild cat species, as well as many other terrestrial and marine carnivore species such as polar bears and Mediterranean monk seals, and large herbivores such as elephants. According to the report, which featured contributions from 155 experts from 40 organisations based in 27 countries, human-wildlife conflict is as much a development and humanitarian issue as it is a conservation concern, affecting the income of farmers, herders, artisanal fishers, and Indigenous peoples, particularly those living in poverty and without resilience; interfering with access to water for communities competing with wildlife for local water sources and driving inequality where those who pay the price for living with wildlife do not receive the benefits of coexistence, among other things. Yet despite being so strongly linked to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), human-wildlife conflict continues to be overlooked by policymakers.
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This joint report reveals that globally, conflict-related killing affects more than 75% of the world’s wild cat species, as well as many other terrestrial and marine carnivore species such as polar bears and Mediterranean monk seals, and large herbivores such as elephants. According to the report, which featured contributions from 155 experts from 40 organisations based in 27 countries, human-wildlife conflict is as much a development and humanitarian issue as it is a conservation concern, affecting the income of farmers, herders, artisanal fishers, and Indigenous peoples, particularly those living in poverty and without resilience; interfering with access to water for communities competing with wildlife for local water sources and driving inequality where those who pay the price for living with wildlife do not receive the benefits of coexistence, among other things. Yet despite being so strongly linked to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), human-wildlife conflict continues to be overlooked by policymakers.

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