Village size and forest disturbance in Bhadra Wildlife Sanctuary, Western Ghats, India |
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Authors: | Krithi K. Karanth Lisa M. Curran Jonathan D. Reuning-Scherer |
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Affiliation: | Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, 205 Prospect Street, New Haven, CT 06511, USA |
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Abstract: | Habitat fragmentation, land cover change and biodiversity loss are often associated with village communities in protected areas, but the extent and intensity of such impacts are often inadequately assessed. We record resource use and depletion by human inhabitants by conducting ecological surveys in six villages and social surveys in all 13 villages of varying sizes in India’s Bhadra Wildlife Sanctuary (492 km2). We examined the occurrence of 10 regionally-specific ecological indicators that encompassed several aspects of human activities. Thirty transects with 180 total sampling locations recorded the occurrence of these specific habitat disturbance variables. High correlations between the variables led to the use of principal component analysis to derive an effective summary index that reflected disturbance intensity and determined village ecological impacts spatially. A generalized linear model was fit to determine the rate at which disturbance decreases as we move away from village centers. Our model indicates that village size class, distance from the village and proximity to other villages were significant predictors of the disturbance index. The index distinguished each village’s spatially explicit ecological impact. We estimated that an average area of 23.7 km2 of the forest surrounding the six focal villages was altered by human activities. These six villages have directly impacted 8-10% of this protected area. |
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Keywords: | Forest use Households Land cover Park management Protected area India |
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