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Copyright © 2023 by the author(s). Published here under license by the Resilience Alliance. Open Access. CC -BY 4.0 C&C
<br />Luat-Hu`eu, K. K., M. Blaich Vaughan, and M. R. Price. 2023. Understanding local pig hunter values and practices as a means L J
<br />toward co -management of feral pigs (Sus scrofa; pua'a) in the Hawaiian Islands. Ecology and Society 28(2):32. htf f� // t,/i0.. 7.
<br />E`^i- 4 3679- 280 237
<br />Research, part of a Special Feature on Collaborative Vq n� �rnent, Environmental :...0 oreti:.Y. 'n' ,,, and ` US i.in ale I velihood;s.
<br />Understanding local pig hunter values and practices as a means toward co -
<br />management of feral pigs (Sus scrofa; pua' a) in the Hawaiian Islands
<br />%iyaw K......juat H0 c a,Mc/anih8ch flauglan ""' and Melissa I'ri I %oP ,
<br />ABSTRACT. Differing values between communities and government resource managers may lead to conflict, particularly when
<br />community members are not involved in decision making. Increasingly, co -management arrangements have become an important tool
<br />to increase local capacity for resource management, increase trust between diverse community groups, and foster effective stewardship.
<br />However, co -management depends upon collaboration between users and managers and the ability to understand relationships between
<br />a given resource and those who use it, even when these communities are often viewed as contravening conservation efforts. Invasive
<br />species, such as feral pigs (Sus scrofa), present particular management challenges because they damage island ecosystems but are also
<br />integral to community life ways and food systems. Based on interviews with local pig hunters in the Hawaiian Islands, we explored the
<br />social -cultural values and practices of local pig hunters, their reasons for hunting, and possibilities for greater collaboration in feral
<br />pig management. Results highlight the importance of hunting for both food and other forms of well-being and cultural perpetuation,
<br />along with opportunities for (1) expanding mechanisms of access to improve hunting opportunities for invasive species; (2) integrating
<br />rights and responsibilities to meet management objectives; and (3) improving communication to enhance collaborative arrangements.
<br />Considering the context of managing community use of an ecologically detrimental invasive species, this study offers insights to guide
<br />co -management partnerships with community groups that are sometimes perceived as opposed to invasive species control efforts.
<br />Key Words: access; collaboration; community engagement; feral pigs; hunting; natural resource management
<br />INTRODUCTION
<br />Natural resource management conflict is often rooted in differing
<br />values amongst government agencies and local communities,
<br />particularly when that resource is an invasive species. For example,
<br />community members may value invasive species for food and
<br />recreation, even as these species are detrimental to native species
<br />and ecosystems, thus conflicting with other cultural values such
<br />as the use of medicinal plants (Crowley et al. 2017, Shack4eton et
<br />al. 2019). Management conflicts with invasive species are
<br />exacerbated when local communities who rely upon and manage
<br />those species are not included in agency planning and
<br />conservation efforts (Smith et al. 1999, Schuett et al. 2001).
<br />To improve natural resource management outcomes, natural
<br />resource managers (e.g., forestry and wildlife managers) and
<br />communities using a given resource may engage in co -
<br />management arrangements (Schuett et al. 2001, Folke et al. 2005,
<br />Berkes 2009). Co -management is "the sharing of power and
<br />responsibilities between the government and local resource users"
<br />(Berkes et al. 1991:12). However, co -management arrangements
<br />can take a variety of forms, and include a wide spectrum of power
<br />sharing (Pomeroy and Berkes 1997). Co -management outcomes
<br />may lead to increased capacity at the local level (e.g., resource
<br />users) to manage their own resources, as well as increased trust
<br />between government agencies and community members (local
<br />resource users; Plummer and Fitzgibbon 2004), for example in
<br />local stewardship of fisheries (Pinkerton 1999). Selected co -
<br />management agreements between Indigenous groups and
<br />governments have been shown to address conflicts in natural
<br />resource management (Castro and Nielsen 2001). In this study,
<br />Indigenous peoples are defined as, "populations of people who
<br />had ancestral relationships to Place that were already several
<br />centuries if not several millennia old at the point of contact with
<br />Euro-American colonisers" (Price et al. 2021:310).
<br />Co -management arrangements may contribute a range of positive
<br />functions to natural resource management, including the
<br />integration of different knowledge systems such as Indigenous
<br />knowledge, traditional ecological knowledge, and local ecological
<br />knowledge. In this study we utilize the definition of Indigenous
<br />knowledge (IK) provided by Warren et al. (1995) as knowledge
<br />held by Indigenous people, or knowledge unique to a society or
<br />culture. Traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) is a body of
<br />knowledge, practices, and beliefs, developed through adaptive
<br />processes and passed down through generations by cultural
<br />transmission, about human relationships with each other and the
<br />environment (Berkes et al. 2000). A related body of knowledge
<br />that may overlap with IK and TEK is local ecological knowledge
<br />(LEK), held by a group of people about their local ecosystems,
<br />which includes the interplay between organisms and the
<br />environment (Olsson and Folke 2001). Acknowledging that
<br />cultures are dynamic and constantly evolving, we also engage with
<br />the integrated term Indigenous and local knowledge (ILK) to
<br />describe knowledge systems held by both Indigenous and local
<br />peoples (Williams et al. 2020). In this study, we recognize the
<br />knowledge held by hunters in Hawaii, not all of whom are native
<br />Hawaiian, as a form of ILK. Many hunters possess valuable
<br />ecological knowledge about the places where they hunt (Peterson
<br />et al. 2011, Young et al. 2016a). In addition, hunting, along with
<br />fishing, and other related biocultural practices, such as
<br />preparation, preservation, and sharing of meat are recognized for
<br />their value in maintaining connections between humans and the
<br />environment through the gathering of food (Vaughan and
<br />Vitousek 2013, Garibaldi and Turner 2004).
<br />In some places co -management of invasive species includes
<br />Indigenous and local communities who value and utilize these
<br />resources. In Kakadu National Park, Jawoyn elders and park
<br />rangers engaged with Indigenous knowledge to co -manage feral
<br />pigs, for example. In this case, they were able to quantify the
<br />'Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Management, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, Honolulu, HI, USA, 2Hawai'i Sea Grant
<br />College Program, Honolulu, HI, USA, 3Hui'Aina Momona, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, Honolulu, HI, USA
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