What is the evidence that counter‐wildlife crime interventions are effective for conserving African, Asian and Latin American wildlife directly threatened by exploitation? A systematic map

Author:

Rytwinski T.1ORCID,Muir M. J.2,Miller J. R. B.34ORCID,Smith A.1,Kelly L. A.1ORCID,Bennett J. R.1ORCID,Öckerman S. L. A.1,Taylor J. J.1ORCID,Lemieux A. M.56ORCID,Pickles R. S. A.7ORCID,Gore M. L.8ORCID,Pires S. F.9ORCID,Pokempner A.2,Slaughter H.10,Carlson D. P.2,Adhiasto D. N.11,Arroyo Quiroz I.12ORCID,Cooke S. J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Canadian Centre for Evidence‐Based Conservation, Department of Biology and Institute of Environmental and Interdisciplinary Sciences Carleton University Ottawa Ontario Canada

2. Division of International Conservation, International Affairs United States Fish and Wildlife Service Washington District of Columbia USA

3. Combating Wildlife Trafficking Strategy and Partnerships Branch, Division of International Conservation, International Affairs United States Fish and Wildlife Service Washington District of Columbia USA

4. Department of Environmental Science and Policy George Mason University Fairfax Virginia USA

5. LEAD Conservation Wageningen The Netherlands

6. Department of Criminal Law and Criminology Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

7. Panthera Wild Cat Conservation Malaysia Jaya One, Jalan Universiti Petaling Jaya Selangor Malaysia

8. Department of Geographical Sciences University of Maryland College Park Maryland USA

9. Department of Criminology & Criminal Justice Florida International University Miami Florida USA

10. Office of Law Enforcement United States Fish and Wildlife Service Washington District of Columbia United States

11. Science for Endangered and Trafficked Species (SCENTS) Foundation, Arimbi Conservation Integrated Office Bogor West Java Indonesia

12. Centro Regional de Investigaciones Multidisciplinarias Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México Ciudad de Mexico Mexico

Abstract

Abstract Counter‐wildlife crime (CWC) interventions—those that directly protect target wildlife from illegal harvest/persecution, detect and sanction rule‐breakers, and interdict and control illegal wildlife commodities—are widely applied to address biodiversity loss. This systematic map provides an overview of the literature on the effectiveness of CWC interventions for conserving African, Asian and Latin American wildlife directly threatened by exploitation, including human–wildlife conflicts that trigger poaching. Following our systematic map protocol (Rytwinski, Öckerman, et al., 2021), we compiled peer‐reviewed and grey literature and screened articles using pre‐defined inclusion criteria. Included studies were coded for key variables of interest, from which we produced a searchable database, interactive map and structured heatmaps. A total of 530 studies from 477 articles were included in the systematic map. Most studies were from Africa and Asia (81% of studies) and focused on African and Asian elephants (16%), felids (14%) and turtles and tortoises (11%). Most evaluations of CWC interventions targeted wildlife products (rather than species) and the transfer of those products along the wildlife crime continuum (40% of cases). Population/species outcomes were most commonly measured via indicators of threat reduction (65% of cases) and intermediate outcomes (25%). We identified knowledge clusters where studies investigated the links between (1) patrols and other preventative actions to increase detection and population abundance and (2) information analysis and sharing and wildlife crime/trade levels. However, the effectiveness of most interventions was not rigorously evaluated. Most investigations used post‐implementation monitoring only (e.g. lacking a comparator), and no experimental designs were found. We identified several key knowledge gaps including a paucity of studies by geography (Latin America), taxonomy (plants, birds and reptiles), interventions (non‐patrol‐based CWC interventions) and outcomes (biological and the combination of biological and human well‐being outcomes). Our map reveals an opportunity to improve the rigour and documentation of CWC intervention evaluations, which would enable the evidence‐based selection of effective approaches to improve wildlife conservation and national security.

Funder

Carleton University

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Reference54 articles.

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