Human-wildlife coexistence in shared landscapes requires effectively navigating different stakeholder interests. Despite progress in this field, most studies focus on a limited number of “problematic” wildlife species. This narrow scope overlooks the species-specific nature of human-wildlife interactions. To identify general patterns in stakeholder perceptions of diverse wildlife species, we implemented a modified 3i (interest, influence, impact) method to assess how individuals within seven stakeholder groups (crop farmers, livestock farmers, foresters, hunters, tourism operators, protected area managers, and staff of environmental non-governmental organiza­tions) rated their interest in, their influence on, and how they are impacted by twelve wildlife species categories: moose, red deer, wild reindeer, chamois, roe deer, brown bear, wild boar, grey wolf, European ground squirrel, cormorant, eagles, and vultures (some of them were site-specific). The study design consisted of two steps: 1) assessing expert perceptions of the 3i for each stakeholder-species combination in each of the five study areas in Bulgaria, Germany, Italy, Norway, and Spain, and 2) assessing stakeholder (251 individuals) perceptions of the 3i. We found substantial variation in stakeholder perceptions across groups, sites, and species categories. Within-group heterogeneity and individual respondents belonging to multiple stakeholder categories further challenged simplistic assumptions of distinct and well-defined stake­holder perspectives. Expert perceptions often underestimated stakeholder interest in wildlife species categories and occasionally diverged from stakeholder-perceptions of influence and impact. Notably, perceived impacts of brown bears, wolves, and eagles often exceeded the perceived influence on these species categories, underscoring a sense of powerlessness in managing interactions in some sites.

Comparative Stakeholder Perceptions of Wildlife Management in Five European Multi-Use Landscapes / Kiffner, Christian; Linnell, John D. C.; Capelli, Simona; Ciolli, Marco; Iglesias, Ana; Jewell, Kyle; Kaltenborn, Bjørn; König, Hannes J.; Martin-Collado, Daniel; Prodanova, Hristina; Soriano, Barbara; Stoycheva, Vanya; Tattoni, Clara; Uthes, Sandra; Volani, Stefania; Zöller, Moya; Ostermann-Miyashita, Emu-Felicitas. - In: JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT. - ISSN 1095-8630. - ELETTRONICO. - 389, 2025:126186(2025), pp. 1-18. [10.1016/j.jenvman.2025.126186]

Comparative Stakeholder Perceptions of Wildlife Management in Five European Multi-Use Landscapes

Simona Capelli;Marco Ciolli;Kyle Jewell;Clara Tattoni;Stefania Volani;
2025-01-01

Abstract

Human-wildlife coexistence in shared landscapes requires effectively navigating different stakeholder interests. Despite progress in this field, most studies focus on a limited number of “problematic” wildlife species. This narrow scope overlooks the species-specific nature of human-wildlife interactions. To identify general patterns in stakeholder perceptions of diverse wildlife species, we implemented a modified 3i (interest, influence, impact) method to assess how individuals within seven stakeholder groups (crop farmers, livestock farmers, foresters, hunters, tourism operators, protected area managers, and staff of environmental non-governmental organiza­tions) rated their interest in, their influence on, and how they are impacted by twelve wildlife species categories: moose, red deer, wild reindeer, chamois, roe deer, brown bear, wild boar, grey wolf, European ground squirrel, cormorant, eagles, and vultures (some of them were site-specific). The study design consisted of two steps: 1) assessing expert perceptions of the 3i for each stakeholder-species combination in each of the five study areas in Bulgaria, Germany, Italy, Norway, and Spain, and 2) assessing stakeholder (251 individuals) perceptions of the 3i. We found substantial variation in stakeholder perceptions across groups, sites, and species categories. Within-group heterogeneity and individual respondents belonging to multiple stakeholder categories further challenged simplistic assumptions of distinct and well-defined stake­holder perspectives. Expert perceptions often underestimated stakeholder interest in wildlife species categories and occasionally diverged from stakeholder-perceptions of influence and impact. Notably, perceived impacts of brown bears, wolves, and eagles often exceeded the perceived influence on these species categories, underscoring a sense of powerlessness in managing interactions in some sites.
2025
126186
Settore AGR/05 - Assestamento Forestale e Selvicoltura
Settore BIOS-03/A - Zoologia
Kiffner, Christian; Linnell, John D. C.; Capelli, Simona; Ciolli, Marco; Iglesias, Ana; Jewell, Kyle; Kaltenborn, Bjørn; König, Hannes J.; Martin-Coll...espandi
Comparative Stakeholder Perceptions of Wildlife Management in Five European Multi-Use Landscapes / Kiffner, Christian; Linnell, John D. C.; Capelli, Simona; Ciolli, Marco; Iglesias, Ana; Jewell, Kyle; Kaltenborn, Bjørn; König, Hannes J.; Martin-Collado, Daniel; Prodanova, Hristina; Soriano, Barbara; Stoycheva, Vanya; Tattoni, Clara; Uthes, Sandra; Volani, Stefania; Zöller, Moya; Ostermann-Miyashita, Emu-Felicitas. - In: JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT. - ISSN 1095-8630. - ELETTRONICO. - 389, 2025:126186(2025), pp. 1-18. [10.1016/j.jenvman.2025.126186]
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