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The costs and benefits of coexistence: What determines people's willingness to live near nonhuman primates?
- Source :
- American Journal of Primatology. 83
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- Wiley, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Living near primate species has positive and negative outcomes for human communities. While most studies focus on understanding people's perceptions regarding the adverse consequences of interacting with primates, less is known about people's willingness to coexist with primates or reasons that may promote human-primate coexistence. We surveyed 794 people co-living with four different primate species-rhesus macaque Macaca mulatta, bonnet macaque Macaca radiata, lion-tailed macaque Macaca silenus, and Hanuman langur Semnopithecus dussumieri-in southern and western India to understand how people perceived the costs and benefits of coexistence. The results of our semi-structured interview study revealed that although tangible costs (i.e., financial losses from primate depredation) primarily drive people's stated tolerance for primate presence, intangible benefits from primates (i.e., their ecological, existence, sentience, and religious values) also critically affect attitudes towards coexistence. Amongst the four species, people associated rhesus macaques with the greatest costs and fewest benefits, lion-tailed macaques with the lowest costs, and bonnet macaques with the highest benefits. People preferred lion-tailed macaques and Hanuman langurs more than bonnet and rhesus macaques, and affection for a species shaped how people viewed costs accruing from the species. People's preferences for species were influenced by their existence, ecological, and sentience values more than their religious value. We suggest that intangible benefits influence people's fondness for a primate species and this, in turn, shapes how people perceive costs resulting from the species. Hence strengthening people's perceptions of the intangible benefits they receive from primate species will improve human tolerance for living near primates. We argue that there is a need to understand the context of human-primate conflicts beyond the cost aspects and focus on the benefits to improve human-primate coexistence.
- Subjects :
- Religious values
biology
Cost-Benefit Analysis
India
Context (language use)
biology.organism_classification
Macaca mulatta
Macaque
Existence value
Rhesus macaque
Macaca radiata
Geography
Sentience
biology.animal
Animals
Animal Science and Zoology
Primate
Socioeconomics
Bonnet macaque
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10982345 and 02752565
- Volume :
- 83
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- American Journal of Primatology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c595d3390e4e1c292ebf3af8bd109028