Human-wildlife Interactions and Community Livelihoods: The Case of Villages Around the Selous Game Reserve, Morogoro District, Tanzania
Human-wildlife Interactions and Community Livelihoods: The Case of Villages Around the Selous Game Reserve, Morogoro District, Tanzania
Abstract
In developing nations, particularly in Africa, interactions between humans and
animals (HWIs) are widespread as local populations heavily rely on natural
resources such as forests, which serve as habitats for flora and fauna. This paper
draws from a study which investigated human-wildlife interactions (HWIs) in
four villages—Mvuha, Mbwade, Milengwelengwe, and Kisaki Gomero—
surrounding the Selous Game Reserve (SGR). A mixed methods approach was
adopted to aid data capturing from 312 households and 11 key informants.
Spatial analysis was employed to depict land use and land cover changes around
the SGR over time due to human influence. The results indicated that HWIs were
influenced by changes in water and pasture availability caused by two elements
of weather: temperature and rainfall. People in WMA-designated villages
complained about the lack of employment and unfair distribution of benefits,
whereby the main concern of non-WMA-designated villages was on the need for
policy review, with emphasis on the holistic conservation approach. Nonetheless,
bush lands have increased in recent decades at the expense of woodland due to
the proliferation of human interference. The paper concludes that the
intersection of community livelihoods and wildlife ecology was the most common
HWI pattern observed. However, typical forms of interaction were often hostile
and instigated human-wildlife conflicts.
