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1 - Eating Wild Animals

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 August 2022

Julia E. Fa
Affiliation:
Manchester Metropolitan University and Center for International Forestry (CIFOR), Indonesia
Stephan M. Funk
Affiliation:
Nature Heritage
Robert Nasi
Affiliation:
Centre for International Forestry Research (CIFOR), Indonesia

Summary

In this first chapter we describe the importance of hunting and meat eating to humans and how this has influenced the evolution of the species. This is followed by a brief review of how prevailing ecological conditions influence human’s dependence on plants or animals to survive at different latitudes. We then document which animal species and groups are currently hunted and used for food, discuss the issue of wild meat markets particularly in Africa and set out our current knowledge of rates of wild meat consumption in different parts of the world. The chapter ends with an explanation of why this book has been conceived and how we can use accumulated knowledge on this subject to reduce wild meat exploitation to sustainable levels, by outlining the main pathways that enable us to understand human predatory behaviour and ways of balancing human and wildlife needs in the future.

Information

Figure 0

Figure 1.1 (a) Frequency distribution of subsistence dependence upon total (fished and hunted) animal foods in worldwide hunter-gatherer societies (n = 229). Frequency indicates the number of societies at that percentage dependence on animal foods. Median = 56–65%, mode = 56–65% (data from Cordain et al. 2000; figure adapted from Mann 2007 with permission from John Wiley & Sons). (b) Effects of latitude on carbohydrate intake (% of energy) for 229 hunter-gatherer diets shown as the minimum and maxiimum percentage recorded for each latitude intervals; maximum values were not available for >60 latitude.

(redrawn from data in Ströhle & Hahn 2011)
Figure 1

Figure 1.2 Examples of animal species consumed by peoples in tropical forest areas in different parts of the world. (a) Frogs on skewers for sale at the Vientiane market, Republic of Lao (photo: J. M. Touzet); (b) Lowland tapir dressed for sale in Amazonia (photo: H. El Bizri); (c) Lizards for sale at the Vientiane market, Republic of Lao.

(photo: J. M. Touzet)
Figure 2

Table 1.1 Number of terrestrial vertebrate species hunted and consumed for their wild meat in tropical and subtropical regions

(data from Redmond et al. 2006)
Figure 3

Figure 1.3 Distribution of body mass of hunted mammal species in Asian, African and South American forests.

(data from Corlett 2007 and Fa & Peres 2001)
Figure 4

Figure 1.4 Ternary plot of proportions of the three most common mammal taxa for sale in wild meat markets in West and Central Africa. A ternary plot is a specialization of a barycentric plot for three variables, which graphically depicts the ratios of three proportions.

(Data sources: Bioko, Fa et al. 1995; Cameroon, Fa et al. 2006; Central African Republic (CAR), Noss 1995; Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Colyn et al. 1987; Gabon, Steel 1994; Nigeria, Fa et al. 2006; Rio Muni, Fa et al. 1995; figure from Fa 2007, adapted with permission from John Wiley & Sons.)
Figure 5

Table 1.2 Reported amounts of fresh edible wild meat and protein intake from hunting in selected rural South American and African communities. Values are in grams per person per day. We used a meat to protein conversion of 0.194 g of protein per gram of meat from Ojasti (1996)

Figure 6

Figure 1.5 Number of scientific articles published on bushmeat and wild meat from 1983 until 2021 appearing in different journals. The most important journals in terms of papers published are shown on the graph.

(data from citations in the Web of Science)
Figure 7

Figure 1.6 Annual number of papers published relating to wild meat or bushmeat since 1983.

(data from citations in Web of Science)

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