COVID-19, conservation programs and Crocodilians
CEESP News: By聽Grahame Webb, Chair, 香港六合彩开奖结果现场直播-SSC聽Crocodile Specialist Group
The effects of the Covid-19 pandemic聽are in some ways the聽鈥渆xperiment that no-one could afford to do鈥, and quantifying its impact seems fundamental.聽Implementing聽conservation programs is usually a matter of integrating a wide range of variables, broadly grouped into economic, social (including cultural, traditional, political) and biological. Biological variables often prove to be the least important, relative to the social and economic ones.
The success of a program, no matter how much planning is undertaken, can only be determined by聽implementing聽it and measuring outcomes, because many assumptions are involved. But sustaining聽the program over the long-term聽means adapting to聽risk聽(known) and聽uncertainty聽(unknown wildcards), which the Covid-19 pandemic certainly is.
The assumption that things eventually 鈥渨ill return to normal鈥 remains untested. For some people with limited means, income derived from crocodiles improves but does not sustain livelihoods, and so the impact is not so great. But for the larger farming operations that extend these benefits to local people, there is an increasing risk of failure.
For zoos and other institutions that fund crocodilian conservation programs, for species with no commercial value - the zoos are closed and funding priorities have shifted to sustaining their own operations.
Seen from this light, Covid-19 is providing important insights into the assumptions underpinning crocodilian conservation programs, and reaffirming the fundamental importance of economic variables in their many and varied forms to be able to achieve successful conservation.