The Sustainability of Subsistence Hunting in the Neotropics Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Hunting is an important component of native subsistence strategies in Amazonia. It is also a serious threat to biodiversity in some areas. We present data on the faunal harvests of two native Neotropical subsistence hunting peoples, Machiguenga bow-hunters and Piro shotgun hunters of Peru. The rate of annual harvest per square kilometer of catchment is estimated and compared to rates of sustainable harvest calculated by Robinson and Redford (1991). We used indicators of prey abundance to test for the depletion of species that hunters killed in numbers greater than what the model predicts to be sustainable. As predicted, we found the strongest evidence for local depletion of the large primates at the Piro site. The woolly monkey (Lagothrix lagothricha) harvest at the Machiguenga village and the deer (Mazama americana) and collared peccary (Tayassu tajacu) harvests at both sites were not predicted to be unsustainable and we found no evidence for depletion. Machiguenga bow hunters killed spider monkeys (Ateles paniscus) in quantities that were slightly above what the model predicted to be sustainable, yet we found no evidence for depletion. Differential species vulnerability, catchment size, and consumer population size could be important factors in determining sustainability.

published proceedings

  • Conservation Biology

altmetric score

  • 3

author list (cited authors)

  • Alvard, M. S., Robinson, J. G., Redford, K. H., & Kaplan, H.

citation count

  • 165

complete list of authors

  • Alvard, Michael S||Robinson, John G||Redford, Kent H||Kaplan, Hillard

publication date

  • August 1997

publisher