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Article

Comparison of local knowledge and researcher-led observations for wildlife exploitation assessment and management

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Citation

Temple AJ, Stead SM, Hind-Ozan E, Jiddawi N & Berggren P (2020) Comparison of local knowledge and researcher-led observations for wildlife exploitation assessment and management. Environmental Conservation, 47 (4), pp. 304-309. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0376892920000296

Abstract
The use of local knowledge observations to generate empirical wildlife resource exploitation data in data-poor, capacity-limited settings is increasing. Yet, there are few studies quantitatively examining their relationship with those made by researchers or natural resource managers. We present a case study comparing intra-annual patterns in effort and mobulid ray catches, derived from local knowledge and fisheries landings data at identical spatio-temporal scales in Zanzibar (Tanzania). The Bland-Altman approach to method comparison was used to quantify agreement, bias and precision between methods. Observations from the local knowledge of fishers and those led by researchers showed significant evidence of agreement, demonstrating the potential for local knowledge to act as a proxy for, or complement, researcher-led methods in assessing intra-annual patterns of wildlife resource exploitation. However, there was evidence of bias and low precision between methods, undermining any assumptions of equivalency. Our results underline the importance of considering bias and precision between methods, as opposed to simply assessing agreement, as is commonplace in the literature. This case-study demonstrates the value of rigorous method-comparison in informing appropriate use of outputs from different knowledge sources, thus facilitating the sustainable management of wildlife resources and the livelihoods of those reliant upon them.

Keywords
bias; bycatch; elasmobranch; fisheries; hunting; precision

Journal
Environmental Conservation: Volume 47, Issue 4

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2020
Publication date online20/08/2020
Date accepted by journal10/07/2020
URL
ISSN0376-8929
eISSN1469-4387

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