Human-wildlife conflicts influence attitudes but not necessarily behaviors: Factors driving the poaching of bears in China

作者: Fang Liu , William J. McShea , David L. Garshelis , Xiaojian Zhu , Dajun Wang

DOI: 10.1016/J.BIOCON.2010.10.009

关键词:

摘要: Human-wildlife conflicts often spur retaliatory killing, which may be a major threat to some wildlife species. Asiatic black bears depredate crops and livestock and also attack humans …

参考文章(62)
Malcolm David Eckel, IS THERE A BUDDHIST PHILOSOPHY OF NATURE Boston studies in the philosophy of science. ,vol. 195, pp. 53- 69 ,(1998) , 10.1007/978-94-017-2614-6_5
D. J. Decker, S. J. Riley, Wildlife stakeholder acceptance capacity for cougars in Montana Wildlife Society Bulletin. ,vol. 28, pp. 931- 939 ,(2000)
Rosie Woodroffe, Alan Rabinowitz, Simon Thirgood, People and Wildlife, Conflict or Co-existence? ,(2005)
Gloria Galeano, Forest use at the Pacific Coast of Choco, Colombia : A quantitative approach Economic Botany. ,vol. 54, pp. 358- 376 ,(2000) , 10.1007/BF02864787
Icek Ajzen, Martin Fishbein, Understanding Attitudes and Predicting Social Behavior ,(1980)
Hongyi Harry Lai, The Religious Revival in China The Copenhagen Journal of Asian Studies. ,vol. 18, pp. 40- 64 ,(2005) , 10.22439/CJAS.V18I0.19
Charles Sir Bell, The Religion of Tibet ,(1968)