
AbstractHuman–carnivore conflict is a primary driver of carnivore declines worldwide and resolving these conflicts is a conservation priority. However, resources to mitigate conflicts are limited and should be focused on areas of highest priority. We conducted 820 semistructured interviews with community members living within Kenya's Maasai Mara ecosystem. A multiscale analysis was used to determine the influence of husbandry and environmental factors on livestock depredation inside livestock enclosures (bomas). Areas with a high proportion of closed habitat and protected areas had the highest risk of depredation. Depredation was most likely to occur at weak bomas and at households where there were fewer dogs. We used the results to identify potential conflict hotspots by mapping the probability of livestock depredation across the landscape. 21.4% of the landscape was classified as high risk, and within these areas, 53.4% of the households that were interviewed had weak bomas. Synthesis and applications. With limited resources available to mitigate human–carnivore conflicts, it is imperative that areas are identified where livestock is most at risk of depredation. Focusing mitigation measures on high‐risk areas may reduce conflict and lead to a decrease in retaliatory killings of predators.
Livestock, Wildlife Ecology and Conservation Biology, Predation, Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law, Wildlife, Animal husbandry, Tanzania, Predation Risk, Environmental science, Rangeland Degradation, Sociology, Maasai, Rangeland Degradation and Pastoral Livelihoods, Carnivore, Human-Wildlife Conflict, Environmental resource management, Biology, Original Research, Environmental planning, Ecology, Geography, Agriculture, Forestry, FOS: Sociology, Ecological Impact of Beaver Activities on Ecosystems, Human–wildlife conflict, Habitat, Habitat Selection, Archaeology, Socioeconomics, FOS: Biological sciences, Environmental Science, Physical Sciences
Livestock, Wildlife Ecology and Conservation Biology, Predation, Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law, Wildlife, Animal husbandry, Tanzania, Predation Risk, Environmental science, Rangeland Degradation, Sociology, Maasai, Rangeland Degradation and Pastoral Livelihoods, Carnivore, Human-Wildlife Conflict, Environmental resource management, Biology, Original Research, Environmental planning, Ecology, Geography, Agriculture, Forestry, FOS: Sociology, Ecological Impact of Beaver Activities on Ecosystems, Human–wildlife conflict, Habitat, Habitat Selection, Archaeology, Socioeconomics, FOS: Biological sciences, Environmental Science, Physical Sciences
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