| Literature DB >> 29969117 |
Jevgeniy Bluwstein1, Katherine Homewood2, Jens Friis Lund1, Martin Reinhardt Nielsen1, Neil Burgess3, Maurus Msuha4, Joseph Olila5, Sironka Stephen Sankeni6, Supuku Kiroiya Millia7, Hudson Laizer8, Filemon Elisante9, Aidan Keane10.
Abstract
Since the 2000s, Tanzania's natural resource management policy has emphasised Wildlife Management Areas (WMAs), designed to promote wildlife and biodiversity conservation, poverty alleviation and rural development. We carried out a quasi-experimental impact evaluation of social impacts of WMAs, collecting data from 24 villages participating in 6 different WMAs across two geographical regions, and 18 statistically matched control villages. Across these 42 villages, we collected participatory wealth ranking data for 13,578 households. Using this as our sampling frame, we conducted questionnaire surveys with a stratified sample of 1,924 household heads and 945 household heads' wives. All data were collected in 2014/15, with a subset of questions devoted to respondents' recall on conditions that existed in 2007, when first WMAs became operational. Questions addressed household demographics, land and livestock assets, resource use, income-generating activities and portfolios, participation in natural resource management decision-making, benefits and costs of conservation. Datasets permit research on livelihood and wealth trajectories, and social impacts, costs and benefits of conservation interventions in the context of community-based natural resource management.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29969117 PMCID: PMC6029570 DOI: 10.1038/sdata.2018.87
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Figure 1Map of study villages in regional context and in relation to WMAs and protected areas.
WMA sites.
| Savanna | Enduimet | High (GV+H) | Agro-pastoral | Arusha (Northern Tanzania) | 9 | 2007 |
| Makame | Low (GV+H) | Manyara (Northern Tanzania) | 4 | 2009 | ||
| Burunge | High (GV+H) | Manyara (Northern Tanzania) | 10 | 2006 | ||
| Miombo | Tunduru Nalika | Low (H) | Farm-based | Ruvuma (Southern Tanzania) | 9 | 2003 |
| Mbarang'andu | Low (H) | Ruvuma (Southern Tanzania) | 7 | 2006 | ||
| Liwale | Low (H) | Lindi (Southern Tanzania) | 9 | 2003 |
*GV=game viewing; H=Hunting.
Data sources for matching variables.
| Distance from major town | Market access | 2002 | Africover |
| Distance from major road | Market access | 2002 | Africover |
| Distance from wildlife corridor | Conservation | 2008 | Wildlife Corridors in Tanzania |
| Distance from protected area | Conservation | 2013 | World Database on Protected Areas |
| Total annual precipitation | Environmental | 1997-2006 (mean) | Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission |
| Elevation | Environmental | 2000 | Shuttle Radar Topography Mission |
| Slope | Environmental | 2000 | Shuttle Radar Topography Mission |
| Within elephant range | Conservation | 2002 | African Elephant Status Report 2002 |
| Within lion range | Conservation | 2008 | IUCN Red List |
| Population density | Demographic | 2002 | Afripop |
| Proportion of forest | Environmental | 2000 | Global Land Cover 2000 |
| Proportion of woodland and shrubs | Environmental | 2000 | Global Land Cover 2000 |
| Proportion of grassland and crops | Environmental | 2000 | Global Land Cover 2000 |
WMA study villages and matched non-WMA villages.
| Olasiti and Kakoi (both part of Minjingu in 2007) | Burunge WMA | Babati | N | Gidemar |
| Magara, Manyara, Maweni (all part of Magara in 2007) | Babati | N | Kisangaji | |
| Babati | N | Namalulu | ||
| Sangaiwe | Babati | N | Magugu | |
| Kitenden | Enduimet WMA | Longido | N | Selela |
| Longido | N | Selela | ||
| Sinya | Longido | N | Oltukai | |
| Tinga Tinga | Longido | N | Ngabobo | |
| Irkiushoibor | Makame WMA | Kiteto | N | Kimotorok |
| Katikati | Kiteto | N | Gidemar | |
| Kiteto | N | Namalulu | ||
| Ndedo and Ngabolo (both part of Ndedo in 2007) | Kiteto | N | Kimotorok | |
| Liwale WMA | Liwale | S | Mkutano | |
| Kimambi | Liwale | S | Zinga Kibaoni | |
| Mirui | Liwale | S | Kiperere | |
| Mpigamiti | Liwale | S | Ngongowele | |
| Kilimasera | Mbarang’andu WMA | Namtumbo | S | Naikezi |
| Kitanda | Namtumbo | S | Mputa | |
| Nambecha | Namtumbo | S | Mputa | |
| Songaambele | Namtumbo | S | Chengena | |
| Darajambili | Tunduru Nalika WMA | Tunduru | S | Mangunguru |
| Kindamba | Tunduru | S | Mtengashari | |
| Mbugalaji | Tunduru | S | Mangunguru | |
| Ndenyende | Tunduru | S | Kitalo | |
| Non-WMA villages | N | Olmolog, Kitenden | ||
| N | Sinya | |||
| N | Magara, Manyara, Maweni | |||
| N | Mwada and Ngolei, Makame | |||
| N | Sangaiwe | |||
| N | Olasiti and Kakoi, Katikati | |||
| S | Kitanda, Nambecha | |||
| S | Kilimasera | |||
| S | Songaambele | |||
| S | Mbugalaji, Darajambili | |||
| S | Kindamba | |||
| S | Ndenyende | |||
| S | Barikiwa | |||
| S | Mirui | |||
| S | Kimambi | |||
| S | Mpigamiti | |||
| N | Tinga Tinga | |||
| N | Irkiushoibor, Ndedo and Ngabolo |
*=AA office is in this WMA village
**=AA office is not in a WMA village
Household sampling strategy in each village.
| Very poor | 10 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
| Leaders | 10 | 5 | 5 | 5 |
| Other | 20 | 10 | 10 | 5 |
| Total | 40 | 20 | 20 | 15 |
Structure of both household questionnaires.
| Sections that were only covered in WMA villages are indicated with * | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Introduction | Introduction |
| 2 | Household demographics | Household demographics |
| 3 | Overall well-being trends | Livestock |
| 4 | Shocks | Farm/garden |
| 5 | Land | Income generation |
| 6 | Livestock | Remittances |
| 7 | Bushmeat | Food security |
| 8 | Access to resources and mobility | *Participation in WMA decision-making |
| 9 | Environmental Income | Access to natural resources |
| 10 | Livelihood portfolio | Freedom of movement and safety |
| 11 | *Implementation of the WMA | External aid |
| 12 | Direct income and benefits | Ceremonies |
| 13 | Rule of law | *School sponsorship for children |
| 14 | Human casualties and injuries from wildlife and rangers/game scouts | *WMA benefits |
| 15 | Enumerator assessment of interviewee | *WMA costs |
| 16 | Enumerator assessment of interviewee |
Survey period and method.
| 1; Wealth ranking | May 2014-March 2015 | 2007 | 13,578 | Indirectly through focus group | PIMA_WEALTH_RANKING_CODE_LIST.pdf | PIMA_WEALTH_RANKING.csv |
| 2; Household survey with household head | May 2014-May 2015 | 2007 | 1,924 | Directly through questionnaire | PIMA_HHHEAD_SURVEY_INSTRUMENT.pdf | PIMA_HHHEAD_SURVEY.csv, |
| 3; Household survey with wife of household head | May 2014-May 2015 | 2007 | 945 | PIMA_WIFE_SURVEY_INSTRUMENT.pdf | PIMA_WIFE_SURVEY.csv, |
Summary of matching outcome for each of the variables used in the matching procedure.
| The column headed ‘Tfm.’ indicates the type of transformation applied to the variable prior to running the matching procedure to reduce the level of skew (sqrt=square root; ln=natural logarithm; none=no transformation applied). Mean values of matching variables within WMA and non-WMA villages included in the study, before and after matching are shown in the columns ‘WMA’ and ‘Non-WMA’. The standardised mean difference in the variable in WMA and non-WMA villages before and after matching is shown in the column ‘Std. Mean. Diff.’. | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Distance from major town | sqrt | Before | 37.8 | 17.4 | 1.25 |
| After | 39.7 | 37.5 | 0.12 | ||
| Distance from major road | log | Before | 11.6 | 7.0 | 0.44 |
| After | 11.6 | 10.1 | 0.14 | ||
| Distance from wildlife corridor | sqrt | Before | 53.6 | 105.5 | −0.95 |
| After | 50.5 | 63.6 | -0.24 | ||
| Distance from protected area | sqrt | Before | 22.8 | 43.5 | −1.21 |
| After | 25.3 | 33.5 | −0.47 | ||
| Total annual precipitation | log | Before | 809.3 | 783.4 | 0.11 |
| After | 733.3 | 746.8 | −0.06 | ||
| Elevation | sqrt | Before | 881.8 | 833.8 | 0.11 |
| After | 912.4 | 892.7 | 0.07 | ||
| Slope | log | Before | 2.2 | 3.3 | −0.79 |
| After | 1.9 | 2.0 | −0.04 | ||
| Within elephant range | none | Before | 0.9 | 0.1 | 3.57 |
| After | 0.9 | 0.9 | 0.00 | ||
| Within lion range | none | Before | 1.0 | 0.9 | NA |
| After | 1.0 | 1.0 | 0.00 | ||
| Population density | log | Before | 34.2 | 1151.9 | −18.54 |
| After | 42.3 | 64.0 | −0.27 | ||
| Proportion of forest | none | Before | 0.15 | 0.27 | −0.47 |
| After | 0.13 | 0.10 | 0.12 | ||
| Proportion of woodland and shrubs | none | Before | 0.42 | 0.35 | 0.19 |
| After | 0.36 | 0.39 | −0.08 | ||
| Proportion of grassland and crops | none | Before | 0.38 | 0.30 | 0.21 |
| After | 0.48 | 0.50 | −0.04 |
Figure 2QQ-plots comparing the values of each of the matching covariates in the matched pairs of WMA and non-WMA villages included in the study.
Figure 3Mean number of livestock owned, acres of land used and proportion with members who occupy a leadership amongst households grouped by wealth rank in 2014/5.