| Literature DB >> 26479747 |
Abstract
Feeding of wildlife occurs in the context of research, wildlife management, tourism and in opportunistic ways. A review of examples shows that although feeding is often motivated by good intentions, it can lead to problems of public safety and conservation and be detrimental to the welfare of the animals. Examples from British Columbia illustrate the problems (nuisance animal activity, public safety risk) and consequences (culling, translocation) that often arise from uncontrolled feeding. Three features of wildlife feeding can be distinguished: the feasibility of control, the effects on conservation and the effects on animal welfare. An evaluative framework incorporating these three features was applied to examples of feeding from the literature. The cases of feeding for research and management purposes were generally found to be acceptable, while cases of feeding for tourism or opportunistic feeding were generally unacceptable. The framework should allow managers and policy-makers to distinguish acceptable from unacceptable forms of wildlife feeding as a basis for policy, public education and enforcement. Many harmful forms of wildlife feeding seem unlikely to change until they come to be seen as socially unacceptable.Entities:
Keywords: animal welfare; conservation; framework; harm; intentional feeding; provisioning; public safety; wildlife
Year: 2013 PMID: 26479747 PMCID: PMC4494361 DOI: 10.3390/ani3040978
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Wildlife feeding acceptability framework: four types of feeding activities evaluated by their ability to be controlled (C) and their effects on conservation (E) and animal welfare (W).
| Factors (C, E, W) | Research | Management | Tourism | Opportunistic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| C: feasible to regulate/monitor/intervene | + + | + | − | − − |
| C: safe for the public | + + | + | − * | − * |
| E: contributes to understanding the species | + + | + | + | − |
| E: contributes to saving endangered species | + | + + | − | − |
| E: contributes to population survival | + * | + * | − | − |
| E: does not facilitate poaching or disease | + | − * | − | − * |
| E: contributes to public education | N/A | N/A | +/− ** | + * |
| E: provides economic benefits | N/A | + | +/− ** | − |
| W: effects relatively few animals | + + | + | − ** | − − |
| W: does not cause physiological stress to animal | + | + | − * | − * |
| W: does not cause physical harm to animal | + | − * | − * | − * |
| W: affects only a small portion of lifespan | + + | + | − − * | − − * |
| W: does not disrupt natural foraging | + | − | − − * | − − * |
Items are rated high (+ +), somewhat high (+), somewhat low (−) or low (− −), not applicable (N/A) based on general knowledge of the literature. The use of * indicates that the evaluation may vary for different cases; specifically, * = depends on the species involved and ** = depends on the tourism operator.
Application of the wildlife feeding acceptability framework to reported examples of wildlife feeding based on their ability to be controlled, have beneficial effects on conservation and have a positive long-term effect on animal welfare.
| Feeding activity example | Ability to be controlled | Beneficial conservation effect | Positive long-term effect on animal welfare | Feeding acceptable? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Northern Goshawk study [ | + + | + | + | Yes |
| Townsend’s Chipmunk study [ | + + | + | + | Yes |
| Woodland bird study [ | + + | + | + | Yes |
| Kestrel species recovery [ | + + | + + | + + | Yes |
| Winter deer feeding [ | − | − | − | No |
| Boar baiting [ | − | − − | − − | No |
| Dolphin feeding [ | − | − | − | No |
| Primate feeding [ | − | − | − | No |
| Bear feeding [ | − | − | − | No |
| Komodo dragon feeding [ | − | − | − | No |
| Shark feeding [ | + / −* | + | − | Yes * |
| Backyard bear feeding [ | − − | − − | − | No |
| Backyard bird feeding [ | − | + | Neutral | Yes ** |
| Dingo feeding [ | − | − − | − | No |
Items are rated high (+ +), somewhat high (+), somewhat low (−), low (− −) or neutral; * depends on tourism operator; ** acceptable with conditions: appropriate food by species and season, prevention of non-target species attraction, does not increase the risk of predation (e.g., from cats) or of window strike and does not increase intra- or inter-species aggression.