| Literature DB >> 26911226 |
Fredrik Dalerum1,2,3, Maria Miranda4,5.
Abstract
There is an urgent need for human societies to become environmentally sustainable. Because public policy is largely driven by economic processes, quantifications of the relationship between market prices and environmental values can provide important information for developing strategies towards sustainability. Wildlife in southern Africa is often privately owned and traded at game auctions to be utilized for commercial purposes mostly related to tourism. This market offers an interesting opportunity to evaluate how market prices relate to biologically meaningful species characteristics. In this market, prices were not correlated with species contributions to either phylogenetic or functional diversity, and species contributions to phylogenetic or functional diversity did not influence the trends in prices over time for the past 20 years. Since this economic market did not seem to appreciate evolutionary or ecologically relevant characteristics, we question if the game tourism market may contribute towards biodiversity conservation in southern Africa. We suggest that market prices in general may have limited values as guides for directing conservation and environmental management. We further suggest that there is a need to evaluate what humans value in biological organisms, and how potentially necessary shifts in such values can be instigated.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26911226 PMCID: PMC4766510 DOI: 10.1038/srep21922
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Relationships between game auction prices of southern African ungulates and carnivores and their evolutionary distinctiveness (a), phylogenetic contribution (b), functional distinctiveness (c), and functional contribution (d). Prices were adjusted by the change in the consumer price index using 2012 as comparison year. Phylogenetic and functional metrics have been scaled to represent the deviation from equal contributions of each species.
Figure 2Relationships between predicted scaled prices for southern African ungulates from 1991 to 2012 and their evolutionary distinctiveness (a), phylogenetic contribution (d), functional distinctiveness (c), and functional contribution (d). Prices are shown as the deviation from the mean price of each species, and are in units of standard deviations from this mean. The relationships are quantified as coefficients from linear mixed models using a quadratic relationship between scaled price and time. Prices were adjusted by the change in the consumer price index using 2012 as comparison year prior to being adjusted for species specific means and scaled by species specific standard deviations.