Data from: The changing environment of conservation conflict: geese and farming in Scotland

  • Tom H. E. Mason (Creator)
  • Aidan Keane (Creator)
  • Stephen Redpath (Creator)
  • Nils Bunnefeld (Creator)

Dataset

Description

1. Conflict between conservation objectives and human livelihoods is ubiquitous and can be highly damaging, but the processes generating it are poorly understood. Ecological elements are central to conservation conflict, and changes in their dynamics – for instance due to anthropogenic environmental change – are likely to influence the emergence of serious human-wildlife impacts and, consequently, social conflict.

2. We used mixed-effects models to examine the drivers of historic spatio-temporal dynamics in numbers of Greenland barnacle geese (Branta leucopsis) on the Scottish island of Islay to identify the ecological processes that have shaped the environment in which conflict between goose conservation and agriculture has been triggered.

3. Barnacle goose numbers on Islay increased from 20,000 to 43,000 between 1987 and 2016. Over the same period, the area of improved grassland increased, the number of sheep decreased and the climate warmed.

4. Goose population growth was strongly linked to the increasing area of improved grassland, which provided geese with more high quality forage. Changing climatic conditions, particularly warming temperatures on Islay and breeding grounds in Greenland, have also boosted goose numbers.

5. As the goose population has grown, farms have supported geese more frequently and in larger numbers, with subsequent damaging effects. The creation of high-quality grassland appears to have largely driven damage by geese. Our analysis also reveals the drivers of spatial variation in goose impacts: geese were more likely to occur on farms closer to roosts and those with more improved grassland. However, as geese numbers have increased they have spread to previously less favoured farms.

6. Synthesis and applications. Our study demonstrates the primary role of habitat modification in the emergence of conflict between goose conservation and agriculture, alongside a secondary role of climate change. Our research illustrates the value of exploring socio-ecological history to understand the processes leading to conservation conflict. In doing so, we identify those elements that are more controllable, such as local habitat management, and less controllable, such as climate change, but which both need to be taken into account when managing conservation conflict.

Data type

Population-scale barnacle goose abundance data: Data collected on the abundance of Greenland barnacle geese (Branta leucopsis) on Islay and associated environmental conditions, between 1987 and 2016.
Population scale data 2017.csv

Farm-scale barnacle goose abundance and occurrence data: Data collected on the farm-scale abundance and occurrence of Greenland barnacle geese (Branta leucopsis) on Islay and associated environmental conditions, between 1998 and 2016.
Farm scale data 2017.csv

Copyright and Open Data Licencing

This work is licensed under a CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0) Public Domain Dedication license.
Date made available23 Jun 2018
PublisherDryad Digital Repository
Geographical coverageIslay, Scotland

Keywords

  • barnacle geese
  • Branta leucopsis
  • conservation conflict
  • goose conservation conflict
  • grass damage
  • habitat modification
  • human-wildlife conflict

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