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Dive into the research topics where Greg Stuart-Hill is active.

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Featured researches published by Greg Stuart-Hill.


Conservation Biology | 2009

Local Participation in Natural Resource Monitoring: a Characterization of Approaches

Finn Danielsen; Neil D. Burgess; Andrew Balmford; Paul F. Donald; Mikkel Funder; Julia P. G. Jones; Philip Alviola; Danilo S. Balete; Tom Blomley; Justin S. Brashares; Brian Child; Martin Enghoff; Jon Fjeldså; Sune Holt; Hanne Hübertz; Arne E. Jensen; Per Moestrup Jensen; John Massao; Marlynn M. Mendoza; Yonika M. Ngaga; Michael K. Poulsen; Ricardo Rueda; Moses K. Sam; Thomas Skielboe; Greg Stuart-Hill; Elmer Topp-Jørgensen; Deki Yonten

The monitoring of trends in the status of species or habitats is routine in developed countries, where it is funded by the state or large nongovernmental organizations and often involves large numbers of skilled amateur volunteers. Far less monitoring of natural resources takes place in developing countries, where state agencies have small budgets, there are fewer skilled professionals or amateurs, and socioeconomic conditions prevent development of a culture of volunteerism. The resulting lack of knowledge about trends in species and habitats presents a serious challenge for detecting, understanding, and reversing declines in natural resource values. International environmental agreements require signatories undertake systematic monitoring of their natural resources, but no system exists to guide the development and expansion of monitoring schemes. To help develop such a protocol, we suggest a typology of monitoring categories, defined by their degree of local participation, ranging from no local involvement with monitoring undertaken by professional researchers to an entirely local effort with monitoring undertaken by local people. We assessed the strengths and weaknesses of each monitoring category and the potential of each to be sustainable in developed or developing countries. Locally based monitoring is particularly relevant in developing countries, where it can lead to rapid decisions to solve the key threats affecting natural resources, can empower local communities to better manage their resources, and can refine sustainable-use strategies to improve local livelihoods. Nevertheless, we recognize that the accuracy and precision of the monitoring undertaken by local communities in different situations needs further study and field protocols need to be further developed to get the best from the unrealized potential of this approach. A challenge to conservation biologists is to identify and establish the monitoring system most relevant to a particular situation and to develop methods to integrate outputs from across the spectrum of monitoring schemes to produce wider indices of natural resources that capture the strengths of each.


Conservation Biology | 2016

Complementary benefits of tourism and hunting to communal conservancies in Namibia

Robin Naidoo; L. Chris Weaver; Richard W. Diggle; Greenwell Matongo; Greg Stuart-Hill; Chris Thouless

Tourism and hunting both generate substantial revenues for communities and private operators in Africa, but few studies have quantitatively examined the trade-offs and synergies that may result from these two activities. We evaluated financial and in-kind benefit streams from tourism and hunting on 77 communal conservancies in Namibia from 1998 to 2013, where community-based wildlife conservation has been promoted as a land-use that complements traditional subsistence agriculture. We used data collected annually for all communal conservancies to characterize whether benefits were derived from hunting or tourism. We classified these benefits into 3 broad classes and examined how benefits flowed to stakeholders within communities under the status quo and under a simulated ban on hunting. Across all conservancies, total benefits from hunting and tourism increased at roughly the same rate, although conservancies typically started generating benefits from hunting within 3 years of formation as opposed to after 6 years for tourism. Disaggregation of data revealed that the main benefits from hunting were income for conservancy management and food in the form of meat for the community at large. The majority of tourism benefits were salaried jobs at lodges. A simulated ban on trophy hunting significantly reduced the number of conservancies that could cover their operating costs, whereas eliminating income from tourism did not have as severe an effect. Given that the benefits generated from hunting and tourism typically begin at different times in a conservancys life-span (earlier vs. later, respectively) and flow to different segments of local communities, these 2 activities together may provide the greatest incentives for conservation on communal lands in Namibia. A singular focus on either hunting or tourism would reduce the value of wildlife as a competitive land-use option and have grave repercussions for the viability of community-based conservation efforts in Namibia, and possibly other parts of Africa.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Home on the range: factors explaining partial migration of African buffalo in a tropical environment.

Robin Naidoo; Pierre du Preez; Greg Stuart-Hill; Mark Jago; Martin Wegmann

Partial migration (when only some individuals in a population undertake seasonal migrations) is common in many species and geographical contexts. Despite the development of modern statistical methods for analyzing partial migration, there have been no studies on what influences partial migration in tropical environments. We present research on factors affecting partial migration in African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) in northeastern Namibia. Our dataset is derived from 32 satellite tracking collars, spans 4 years and contains over 35,000 locations. We used remotely sensed data to quantify various factors that buffalo experience in the dry season when making decisions on whether and how far to migrate, including potential man-made and natural barriers, as well as spatial and temporal heterogeneity in environmental conditions. Using an information-theoretic, non-linear regression approach, our analyses showed that buffalo in this area can be divided into 4 migratory classes: migrants, non-migrants, dispersers, and a new class that we call “expanders”. Multimodel inference from least-squares regressions of wet season movements showed that environmental conditions (rainfall, fires, woodland cover, vegetation biomass), distance to the nearest barrier (river, fence, cultivated area) and social factors (age, size of herd at capture) were all important in explaining variation in migratory behaviour. The relative contributions of these variables to partial migration have not previously been assessed for ungulates in the tropics. Understanding the factors driving migratory decisions of wildlife will lead to better-informed conservation and land-use decisions in this area.


Oryx | 2016

A newly discovered wildlife migration in Namibia and Botswana is the longest in Africa

Robin Naidoo; Michael J. Chase; Piet Beytell; P. du Preez; Kelly Landen; Greg Stuart-Hill; Russell Taylor

Migrations of most animal taxa are declining as a result of anthropogenic pressures and land-use transformation. Here, we document and characterize a previously unknown multi-country migration of Burchells zebra Equus quagga that is the longest of all recorded large mammal migrations in Africa. Our data from eight adult female zebras collared on the border of Namibia and Botswana show that in December 2012 all individuals crossed the Chobe River and moved due south to Nxai Pan National Park in Botswana, where they spent a mean duration of 10 weeks before returning, less directly, to their dry season floodplain habitat. The same southward movements were also observed in December 2013. Nxai Pan appeared to have similar environmental conditions to several possible alternative wet season destinations that were closer to the dry season habitat on the Chobe River, and water availability, but not habitat or vegetation biomass, was associated with higher-use areas along the migratory pathway. These results suggest a genetic and/or cultural basis for the choice of migration destination, rather than an environmental one. Regardless of the cause, the round-trip, straight-line migration distance of 500 km is greater than that covered by wildebeest Connochaetes taurinus during their well-known seasonal journey in the Serengeti ecosystem. It merits conservation attention, given the decline of large-scale ecological processes such as animal migrations.


Journal of Heredity | 2013

Contrasting Historical and Recent Gene Flow among African Buffalo Herds in the Caprivi Strip of Namibia

Clinton W. Epps; Jessica A. Castillo; Anne Schmidt-Küntzel; Pierre du Preez; Greg Stuart-Hill; Mark Jago; Robin Naidoo

Population genetic structure is often used to infer population connectivity, but genetic structure may largely reflect historical rather than recent processes. We contrasted genetic structure with recent gene-flow estimates among 6 herds of African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) in the Caprivi Strip, Namibia, using 134 individuals genotyped at 10 microsatellite loci. We tested whether historical and recent gene flows were influenced by distance, potential barriers (rivers), or landscape resistance (distance from water). We also tested at what scales individuals were more related than expected by chance. Genetic structure across the Caprivi Strip was weak, indicating that historically, gene flow was strong and was not affected by distance, barriers, or landscape resistance. Our analysis of simulated data suggested that genetic structure would be unlikely to reflect human disturbances in the last 10-20 generations (75-150 years) because of slow predicted rates of genetic drift, but recent gene-flow estimates would be affected. Recent gene-flow estimates were not consistently affected by rivers or distance to water but showed that isolation by distance appears to be developing. Average relatedness estimates among individuals exceeded random expectations only within herds. We conclude that historically, African buffalo moved freely throughout the Caprivi Strip, whereas recent gene flow has been more restricted. Our findings support efforts to maintain the connectivity of buffalo herds across this region and demonstrate the utility of contrasting genetic inferences from different time scales.


Conservation Biology | 2016

Importance of local values to successful conservation: response to Jacquet and Delon.

Robin Naidoo; L. Chris Weaver; Richard W. Diggle; Greenwell Matongo; Greg Stuart-Hill; Chris Thouless

Jacquet and Delon (2016) criticize our paper “Complementary Benefits of Tourism and Hunting to Communal Conservancies in Namibia” (Naidoo et al. 2016) and argue it is flawed in several respects, to which we respond. First, Jacquet and Delon argue that hunting benefits are largely driven by the value of meat and that removing this from the equation would mean that tourism benefits are far greater than those from hunting. It is important to be clear that there are 2 main, distinct benefits that arise from hunting: meat goes to individuals within the community at large and contractual agreements between hunting operators and local communities generate income that is used for the management of the conservancy. Therefore, even if meat benefits were removed from our calculations, the arguments regarding the proportion of conservancies able to cover their operating costs would remain because it is the much larger fees generated from contractual agreements with communities from hunting operators, as compared to those from tourism agreements, that are predominantly used to pay game guards and to cover conservancy operating costs. With regard to their contention that we may have overvalued meat, detailed records are kept of all animals harvested on communal lands; each species is assigned a standard carcass weight that is used to tabulate how much meat is distributed within the community. The price of meat we used was a wholesale replacement cost (US


South African Journal of Wildlife Research | 2008

A knowledge-based approach to wildlife management

Barbara Paterson; Chris J. Brown; Greg Stuart-Hill; Heike Winschiers; Les G. Underhill; Tim Dunne; Britta Schinzel; Ben Beytell; Fanuel Demas; Pauline Lindeque; Chris Weaver

1.86 / kg in 2013), an approach the country’s Community-Based Natural Resource Management program has adopted since its inception and that we retained for consistency. Communities themselves have taken issue with this method, arguing that the wholesale replacement cost represents an undervaluation of


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2005

The Event Book System: a community-based natural resource monitoring system from Namibia

Greg Stuart-Hill; Richard W. Diggle; Bevan Munali; Jo Tagg; David Ward

We present a method for developing a knowledge base to give wildlife managers timely access to pertinent information. This knowledge-based approach to species management in Namibia focuses on anthologies and management strategies for high-value mammal species. To manage wildlife resources sustainably access to an appropriate knowledge base is essential. The strategic species management approach promotes planning on local, national, and international levels. A hypermedia Information System for Rare Species Management (IRAS) and a decision support system (Wildlife Introduction Advisor) are described. Unlike print media, which become dated, hypermedia is easily updated. The non-sequential nature of hypermedia allows information extraction according to the readers needs. Due to this flexibility hypermedia supports adaptive management and information sharing. Usability evaluation of the IRAS system disproved our assumption that established wildlife conservation categories such as habitat, distribution, and numbers are appropriate and sufficient to structure species information. This result led to a restructuring of the information according to management objectives. Evaluation of the Wildlife Introduction Advisor indicates that the model performs reliably and is robust towards input error. Human experts seem to be susceptible to bias. The economic benefits associated with wildlife translocations demand accountability through a well-defined, transparent distribution process. In Namibia this demand is achieved through the use of a knowledge-based decision support tool.


Journal of Applied Ecology | 2011

Effect of biodiversity on economic benefits from communal lands in Namibia.

Robin Naidoo; L. Chris Weaver; Greg Stuart-Hill; Jo Tagg


Environmental and Resource Economics | 2011

Effect of Diversity of Large Wildlife Species on Financial Benefits to Local Communities in Northwest Namibia

Robin Naidoo; Greg Stuart-Hill; L. Chris Weaver; Jo Tagg; Anna Davis; Andee Davidson

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Robin Naidoo

World Wide Fund for Nature

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Chris Weaver

World Wide Fund for Nature

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David Ward

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

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Justin S. Brashares

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Michael J. Chase

Conservation International

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Tim Dunne

University of Cape Town

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