How accurate is the local ecological knowledge of protected area practitioners?

The scarcity of environmental data means that other sources of information are needed to complement empirical evidence for conservation decisions. By regularly interacting with their local environment, protected area practitioners may generate local ecological knowledge (LEK) that can be used to inf...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cook, C., Wardell-Johnson, Grant, Carter, R., Hockings, M.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Resilience Alliance 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31882
_version_ 1848753507602006016
author Cook, C.
Wardell-Johnson, Grant
Carter, R.
Hockings, M.
author_facet Cook, C.
Wardell-Johnson, Grant
Carter, R.
Hockings, M.
author_sort Cook, C.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The scarcity of environmental data means that other sources of information are needed to complement empirical evidence for conservation decisions. By regularly interacting with their local environment, protected area practitioners may generate local ecological knowledge (LEK) that can be used to inform management decisions. However, the accuracy of LEK is generally poorly understood, and no studies have assessed the accuracy of practitioners' personal knowledge, leading to a vital gap in our ability to best use this information to guide management. We measured the accuracy of practitioners' knowledge of the vegetation condition within protected areas, relative to an empirical vegetation condition assessment tool. Despite the vast majority of practitioners having only personal experiences to inform their judgments, we found that almost 60% of practitioners made assessments of vegetation condition that matched the empirical condition estimates. When inaccurate, practitioners tended to be conservative in their estimates of condition. Although underestimating condition in this way may waste resources through unnecessary management actions, this is likely to be preferable to overestimating condition and thus failing to protect biodiversity by prematurely ceasing restoration programs. We found no relationship between the accuracy of practitioners' LEK and their level of experience as a practitioner, their level of education, or their gender. We believe that under many circumstances practitioners can be a valuable and cost-effective source of information about the condition of the protected areas they manage, but that more research is needed to understand the wide range of factors that may contribute to how land managers build LEK and how management agencies can assist practitioners to build a good understanding of the conditions in their reserves
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:25:37Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-31882
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:25:37Z
publishDate 2014
publisher Resilience Alliance
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-318822017-09-13T15:16:37Z How accurate is the local ecological knowledge of protected area practitioners? Cook, C. Wardell-Johnson, Grant Carter, R. Hockings, M. Local ecological knowledge Evaluation Environmental management Vegetation condition Conservation decisions The scarcity of environmental data means that other sources of information are needed to complement empirical evidence for conservation decisions. By regularly interacting with their local environment, protected area practitioners may generate local ecological knowledge (LEK) that can be used to inform management decisions. However, the accuracy of LEK is generally poorly understood, and no studies have assessed the accuracy of practitioners' personal knowledge, leading to a vital gap in our ability to best use this information to guide management. We measured the accuracy of practitioners' knowledge of the vegetation condition within protected areas, relative to an empirical vegetation condition assessment tool. Despite the vast majority of practitioners having only personal experiences to inform their judgments, we found that almost 60% of practitioners made assessments of vegetation condition that matched the empirical condition estimates. When inaccurate, practitioners tended to be conservative in their estimates of condition. Although underestimating condition in this way may waste resources through unnecessary management actions, this is likely to be preferable to overestimating condition and thus failing to protect biodiversity by prematurely ceasing restoration programs. We found no relationship between the accuracy of practitioners' LEK and their level of experience as a practitioner, their level of education, or their gender. We believe that under many circumstances practitioners can be a valuable and cost-effective source of information about the condition of the protected areas they manage, but that more research is needed to understand the wide range of factors that may contribute to how land managers build LEK and how management agencies can assist practitioners to build a good understanding of the conditions in their reserves 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31882 10.5751/ES-06341-190232 Resilience Alliance fulltext
spellingShingle Local ecological knowledge
Evaluation
Environmental management
Vegetation condition
Conservation decisions
Cook, C.
Wardell-Johnson, Grant
Carter, R.
Hockings, M.
How accurate is the local ecological knowledge of protected area practitioners?
title How accurate is the local ecological knowledge of protected area practitioners?
title_full How accurate is the local ecological knowledge of protected area practitioners?
title_fullStr How accurate is the local ecological knowledge of protected area practitioners?
title_full_unstemmed How accurate is the local ecological knowledge of protected area practitioners?
title_short How accurate is the local ecological knowledge of protected area practitioners?
title_sort how accurate is the local ecological knowledge of protected area practitioners?
topic Local ecological knowledge
Evaluation
Environmental management
Vegetation condition
Conservation decisions
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31882