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Title
Spatial and temporal patterns of fuelwood collection in Wolong Nature Reserve: Implications for panda conservation
Author(s)
He G., Chen X., Beaer S., Colunga M., Mertig A., An L., Zhou S., Linderman M., Ouyang Z., Gage S., Li S., Liu J.
Published
2009
Publisher
Landscape and Urban Planning
Published Version DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landurbplan.2009.01.010
Abstract
Approximately 3 billion people, half of the World's population, are still using fuelwood in their daily lives. Fuelwood collection has been recognized as an important factor in habitat fragmentation and degradation and biodiversity loss, especially in developing countries. Understanding spatial and temporal patterns of fuelwood collection is fundamental to understanding human-environment interactions and designing effective conservation policies. Using Wolong Nature Reserve for giant pandas (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) in China as an example, we surveyed 200 rural households for the locations of their fuelwood collection sites in the past three decades (1970s, 1980s, and 1990s) and other ecological, economic, social, and demographic data. We found that fuelwood collection sites were becoming higher in elevation, more remote, and closer to highly suitable panda habitat from the 1970s to the 1990s. Consequently, fuelwood collectors were traveling longer distances to physically challenging areas, in our case, to areas of high-quality panda habitat. These spatial and temporal patterns of fuelwood collection suggest that future conservation policies for giant pandas, and other species worldwide, should also consider the needs of local communities. © 2009 Elsevier B.V.
Keywords
China; Conservation policy; Fuelwood collection; Panda habitat; Spatio-temporal distribution; Wolong Nature Reserve; Developing countries; Ecology; Ocean habitats; Wood products; Biodiversity; bear; biodiversity; conservation planning; fuelwood; habitat fragmentation; habitat loss; habitat management; nature-society relations; socioeconomic impact; spatiotemporal analysis; species conservation; Asia; China; Eurasia; Far East; Sichuan; Wolong Nature Reserve; Ailuropoda; Ailuropoda melanoleuca
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PUB11869