Identifying indicators of illegal behaviour: carnivore killing in human-managed landscapes

Managing natural resources often depends on influencing people's behaviour, however effectively targeting interventions to discourage environmentally harmful behaviours is challenging because those involved may be unwilling to identify themselves. Non-sensitive indicators of sensitive behaviours are therefore needed. Previous studies have investigated people's attitudes, assuming attitudes reflect behaviour. There has also been interest in using people's estimates of the proportion of their peers involved in sensitive behaviours to identify those involved, since people tend to assume that others behave like themselves. However, there has been little attempt to test the potential of such indicators. We use the randomized response technique (RRT), designed for investigating sensitive behaviours, to estimate the proportion of farmers in north-eastern South Africa killing carnivores, and use a modified logistic regression model to explore relationships between our best estimates of true behaviour (from RRT) and our proposed non-sensitive indicators (including farmers' attitudes, and estimates of peer-behaviour). Farmers' attitudes towards carnivores, question sensitivity and estimates of peers' behaviour, predict the likelihood of farmers killing carnivores. Attitude and estimates of peer-behaviour are useful indicators of involvement in illicit behaviours and may be used to identify groups of people to engage in interventions aimed at changing behaviour.

[1]  Peter G. M. van der Heijden,et al.  How to Improve the Efficiency of Randomised Response Designs , 2005 .

[2]  Erlend B. Nilsen,et al.  Wolf reintroduction to Scotland: public attitudes and consequences for red deer management , 2007, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[3]  A. Beckerman,et al.  Human–predator–prey conflicts: ecological correlates, prey losses and patterns of management , 2005 .

[4]  Stephen M. Redpath,et al.  Using Decision Modeling with Stakeholders to Reduce Human–Wildlife Conflict: a Raptor–Grouse Case Study , 2004 .

[5]  Guy Cowlishaw,et al.  Do wildlife laws work? Species protection and the application of a prey choice model to poaching decisions , 2004, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.

[6]  Eleanor Singer,et al.  CONFIDENTIALITY ASSURANCES AND RESPONSE A QUANTITATIVE REVIEW OF THE EXPERIMENTAL LITERATURE , 1995 .

[7]  S. Romañach,et al.  Livestock husbandry as a tool for carnivore conservation in Africa’s community rangelands: a case–control study , 2007, Biodiversity and Conservation.

[8]  G. Edwards‐Jones,et al.  Modelling farmer decision-making: concepts, progress and challenges , 2006 .

[9]  M. Gusset,et al.  Human–Carnivore Coexistence on Communal Land Bordering the Greater Kruger Area, South Africa , 2008, Environmental management.

[10]  Peter Jackson,et al.  Wild cats status survey and conservation action plan , 1996 .

[11]  Julia P. G. Jones,et al.  Testing novel methods for assessing rule breaking in conservation. , 2010 .

[12]  N. Breslow,et al.  Approximate inference in generalized linear mixed models , 1993 .

[13]  J. Ragle,et al.  IUCN Red List of Threatened Species , 2010 .

[14]  Peter G. M. van der Heijden,et al.  The logistic regression model with response variables subject to randomized response , 2007, Comput. Stat. Data Anal..

[15]  E. Milner‐Gulland,et al.  Ecotourism positively affects awareness and attitudes but not conservation behaviours: a case study at Grande Riviere, Trinidad , 2009, Oryx.

[16]  J. D. Toit,et al.  Attitudes of ranchers towards African wild dogs Lycaon pictus: Conservation implications on private land , 2005 .

[17]  C. Mitchell Dayton,et al.  Improved estimation of academic cheating behavior using the randomized response technique , 1987 .

[18]  Richard W. Olshavsky,et al.  The False Consensus Effect in Estimates of Smoking Prevalence , 1983 .

[19]  C. Mishra,et al.  War and wildlife: a post-conflict assessment of Afghanistan's Wakhan Corridor , 2004, Oryx.

[20]  Jennifer N Solomon,et al.  Measuring and Monitoring Illegal Use of Natural Resources , 2010, Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology.

[21]  S. Bagchi,et al.  Living with large carnivores: predation on livestock by the snow leopard (Uncia uncia) , 2006 .

[22]  Tamás Nepusz,et al.  Journal of Occupational Medicine and Toxicology Comfort in Big Numbers: Does Over-estimation of Doping Prevalence in Others Indicate Self-involvement? , 2008 .

[23]  C. Holmes The influence of protected area outreach on conservation attitudes and resource use patterns: a case study from western Tanzania , 2003, Oryx.

[24]  Joop J. Hox,et al.  Randomized Response Analysis in Mplus , 2004 .

[25]  H. Ellegren,et al.  Microsatellite genotyping of DNA isolated from claws left on tanned carnivore hides , 2005, International Journal of Legal Medicine.

[26]  Kathryn Angus,et al.  The effectiveness of social marketing interventions for health improvement: what's the evidence? , 2006, Public health.

[27]  N. Leader‐Williams,et al.  Cattle ranchers' attitudes to conflicts with jaguar Panthera onca in the Pantanal of Brazil , 2005, Oryx.

[28]  Gerty J. L. M. Lensvelt-Mulders,et al.  Evaluating compliance with a computer assisted randomized response technique: a qualitative study into the origins of lying and cheating , 2007, Comput. Hum. Behav..

[29]  Julia P. G. Jones,et al.  Conservation and human behaviour: lessons from social psychology. , 2010 .

[30]  L. Naughton-Treves,et al.  Paying for Tolerance: Rural Citizens' Attitudes toward Wolf Depredation and Compensation , 2003 .

[31]  J. Ramalho-Santos,et al.  Cronbach's alpha: a tool for assessing the reliability of scales , 1999 .

[32]  Richard A. Posner,et al.  Creating and Enforcing Norms, With Special Reference to Sanctions , 1999 .

[33]  William N. Venables,et al.  Modern Applied Statistics with S , 2010 .

[34]  R. Hilborn Managing fisheries is managing people: what has been learned? , 2007 .

[35]  S. Jacobson,et al.  Estimating Illegal Resource Use at a Ugandan Park with the Randomized Response Technique , 2007 .

[36]  A. Zimmermann,et al.  Human-felid conflict: a review of patterns and priorities worldwide , 2009, Oryx.

[37]  Mollie E. Brooks,et al.  Generalized linear mixed models: a practical guide for ecology and evolution. , 2009, Trends in ecology & evolution.

[38]  M. Infield,et al.  Community attitudes and behaviour towards conservation: an assessment of a community conservation programme around Lake Mburo National Park, Uganda , 2001, Oryx.

[39]  L. Naughton-Treves,et al.  Paying for wolves in Solapur, India and Wisconsin, USA: Comparing compensation rules and practice to understand the goals and politics of wolf conservation , 2010 .

[40]  K. U. Karanth,et al.  Human‐Carnivore Conflict and Perspectives on Carnivore Management Worldwide , 2003 .

[41]  Julia P. G. Jones,et al.  The sleeping policeman: understanding issues of enforcement and compliance in conservation , 2008 .

[42]  S L Warner,et al.  Randomized response: a survey technique for eliminating evasive answer bias. , 1965, Journal of the American Statistical Association.

[43]  R. Hilborn,et al.  Effective Enforcement in a Conservation Area , 2006, Science.

[44]  M. Rogers,et al.  Snow leopard Panthera uncia predation of livestock: An assessment of local perceptions in the Annapurna Conservation Area, Nepal , 1994 .

[45]  Peter Dalgaard,et al.  R Development Core Team (2010): R: A language and environment for statistical computing , 2010 .

[46]  D. Macdonald,et al.  Canids : foxes, wolves, jackals and dogs : status survey and conservation action plan , 2004 .

[47]  Michael I Norton,et al.  Perceptions of a Fluid Consensus: Uniqueness Bias, False Consensus, False Polarization, and Pluralistic Ignorance in a Water Conservation Crisis , 2003, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[48]  D. North,et al.  Economic performance through time , 2012 .

[49]  James D Nichols,et al.  The shrinking ark: patterns of large mammal extinctions in India , 2010, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[50]  Ulf Böckenholt,et al.  Item Randomized-Response Models for Measuring Noncompliance: Risk-Return Perceptions, Social Influences, and Self-Protective Responses , 2007 .

[51]  Gregory M. Hurtz,et al.  An Assessment of the Prevalence, Severity, and Verifiability of Entry-Level Applicant Faking Using the Randomized Response Technique , 2003 .

[52]  Stephen Sutton,et al.  Cambridge Handbook of Psychology, Health and Medicine: Theory of planned behaviour , 2007 .

[53]  Andrew Gelman,et al.  Data Analysis Using Regression and Multilevel/Hierarchical Models , 2006 .

[54]  D. Pollard,et al.  Ophthalmolepis lineolata. In: IUCN 2011. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2011.2 , 2010 .

[55]  V. Nijman,et al.  The trade in bear parts from Myanmar: an illustration of the ineffectiveness of enforcement of international wildlife trade regulations , 2007, Biodiversity and Conservation.

[56]  B. Mann Quantification of illicit fish harvesting in the Lake St Lucia Game Reserve, South Africa , 1995 .

[57]  L. Ross,et al.  The “false consensus effect”: An egocentric bias in social perception and attribution processes , 1977 .

[58]  Johannes A. Landsheer,et al.  Trust and Understanding, Two Psychological Aspects of Randomized Response , 1999 .

[59]  Jochen Musch,et al.  Assessing Sensitive Attributes Using the Randomized Response Technique: Evidence for the Importance of Response Symmetry , 2009 .

[60]  S. Susan,et al.  Theory of Planned Behaviour – Ajzen, 1991 , 2011 .

[61]  E. M. Vieira,et al.  Frequency and characteristics of induced abortion among married and single women in São Paulo, Brazil. , 2009, Cadernos de saude publica.

[62]  Christina Gloeckner,et al.  Modern Applied Statistics With S , 2003 .

[63]  Peter G. M. van der Heijden,et al.  Meta-Analysis of Randomized Response Research , 2005 .

[64]  David R. Anderson,et al.  Model selection and multimodel inference : a practical information-theoretic approach , 2003 .

[65]  N. Leader‐Williams,et al.  Habitat destruction and poaching threaten the Sumatran tiger in Kerinci Seblat National Park, Sumatra , 2003, Oryx.