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Characterizing human-tiger conflict in Sumatra, Indonesia: implications for conservation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2004

Philip J. Nyhus
Affiliation:
Department of Earth & Environment, Franklin and Marshall College, 501 Harrisburg Pike, Lancaster, PA 17603, USA
Ronald Tilson
Affiliation:
Sumatran Tiger Conservation Program and Minnesota Zoo, Apple Valley, MN 55124-8199, USA
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Abstract

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Human-tiger conflict occurs in Indonesia but there is little recent information about the scope of the problem, and adequate policies are not in place to address the conflict. Published and unpublished reports of conflict between Sumatran tigers Panthera tigris sumatrae, people and their livestock were collected and analysed to characterize the extent, distribution and impact of human-tiger conflict on the island of Sumatra, Indonesia. Reportedly, between 1978 and 1997, tigers killed 146 people and injured 30, and killed at least 870 livestock. Conflict was less common in protected areas and more common in intermediate disturbance areas such as multiple-use forests where tigers and people coexist. In Indonesia there is a need to develop a definition of problem tigers, a database to track conflicts, and a process to respond immediately to conflicts when they occur. Without a better understanding of human-tiger conflict and a concerted effort to proactively address the problem, future landscape-level tiger conservation and management efforts may be jeopardized.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© 2004 Fauna & Flora International