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Design solutions to coastal human-wildlife conflicts

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Abstract

Coastal areas can be a challenge for conservation due to multiple competing land uses including development, tourism, and extractive resource use. These multiple land uses often lead to human-wildlife conflicts. Here we propose that collaboration with industrial designers and architects has the potential to generate innovative and effective solutions to coastal human-wildlife conflicts. Many products for modifying animal behavior are already used by conservationists, such as barriers, corridors, and model predators. We propose that their effectiveness, quality, harmonization with local values, and integration with the designed human environment can be improved through collaboration with designers and architects. We illustrate this approach with a case study. We engaged in an industrial design- conservation collaboration focused on the design of multiple product proposals that would support a range of human-sea lion interactions in public parks and the fish market in Valdivia, Chile. The sea lions in Valdivia are a tourist attraction but also potentially dangerous. We produced images of seven proposed products of varying scales, facilitating a range of different sea lion- human interactions. Such collaborations can be useful for developing products that reduce human-wildlife conflicts and align conservation and management with local values. We urge researchers to publish conservation design proposals as well as tests of existing conservation products’ functionality, in order to improve conservation design practice around the world.

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Acknowledgements

Many thanks to Juan Armesto and José Molina for their support at different stages of this project.

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Correspondence to Meredith Root-Bernstein.

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Root-Bernstein, M., Rosas, N.A., Osman, L.P. et al. Design solutions to coastal human-wildlife conflicts. J Coast Conserv 16, 585–596 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11852-012-0198-z

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11852-012-0198-z

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