Intention to kill: Tolerance and illegal persecution of Sumatran tigers and sympatric species

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Intention to kill: Tolerance and illegal persecution of Sumatran tigers and sympatric species. / St John, Freya A. V.; Linkie, Matthew; Martyr, Deborah et al.
In: Conservation Letters, 01.07.2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

St John, FAV, Linkie, M, Martyr, D, Milliyanawati, B, McKay, J, Mangunjaya, F, Leader-Williams, N & Struebig, M 2018, 'Intention to kill: Tolerance and illegal persecution of Sumatran tigers and sympatric species', Conservation Letters.

APA

St John, F. A. V., Linkie, M., Martyr, D., Milliyanawati, B., McKay, J., Mangunjaya, F., Leader-Williams, N., & Struebig, M. (2018). Intention to kill: Tolerance and illegal persecution of Sumatran tigers and sympatric species. Conservation Letters.

CBE

St John FAV, Linkie M, Martyr D, Milliyanawati B, McKay J, Mangunjaya F, Leader-Williams N, Struebig M. 2018. Intention to kill: Tolerance and illegal persecution of Sumatran tigers and sympatric species. Conservation Letters.

MLA

VancouverVancouver

St John FAV, Linkie M, Martyr D, Milliyanawati B, McKay J, Mangunjaya F et al. Intention to kill: Tolerance and illegal persecution of Sumatran tigers and sympatric species. Conservation Letters. 2018 Jul 1. Epub 2018 Mar 14.

Author

St John, Freya A. V. ; Linkie, Matthew ; Martyr, Deborah et al. / Intention to kill: Tolerance and illegal persecution of Sumatran tigers and sympatric species. In: Conservation Letters. 2018.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Intention to kill: Tolerance and illegal persecution of Sumatran tigers and sympatric species

AU - St John, Freya A. V.

AU - Linkie, Matthew

AU - Martyr, Deborah

AU - Milliyanawati, Betty

AU - McKay, Jeanne

AU - Mangunjaya, Fachruddin

AU - Leader-Williams, Nigel

AU - Struebig, Matthew

PY - 2018/7/1

Y1 - 2018/7/1

N2 - Tolerance may lessen when wildlife adversely impacts people. Models from psychology can help elucidate how people make judgments, why they act accordingly, and whether beliefs and norms influence support for policy and intervention.Working in a globally important region for tigers, we estimated hunting prevalence for this endangered species and three sympatric taxa using methods for asking sensitive questions. We also investigated the relative strength of ethnicity and social-psychological predictors in influencing intention to hunt. Men's behavioral intention and perceptions differed by species: pro-conservation values were most prevalent for tiger, weakest for wild boar. Perceived behavioral control was the strongest predictor of hunting- intention; affect and injunctive norms were also important. The prominence of affect in determining intention suggests increasing environmental knowledge is unlikely to curb hunting. However, existing norms could be leveraged to incentivize behavior change. Integrating behavior-change models into conservation science is crucial where strategies require changes in people's actions.

AB - Tolerance may lessen when wildlife adversely impacts people. Models from psychology can help elucidate how people make judgments, why they act accordingly, and whether beliefs and norms influence support for policy and intervention.Working in a globally important region for tigers, we estimated hunting prevalence for this endangered species and three sympatric taxa using methods for asking sensitive questions. We also investigated the relative strength of ethnicity and social-psychological predictors in influencing intention to hunt. Men's behavioral intention and perceptions differed by species: pro-conservation values were most prevalent for tiger, weakest for wild boar. Perceived behavioral control was the strongest predictor of hunting- intention; affect and injunctive norms were also important. The prominence of affect in determining intention suggests increasing environmental knowledge is unlikely to curb hunting. However, existing norms could be leveraged to incentivize behavior change. Integrating behavior-change models into conservation science is crucial where strategies require changes in people's actions.

M3 - Article

JO - Conservation Letters

JF - Conservation Letters

SN - 1755-263X

ER -