El conflicto y la coexistencia entre humanos y vida silvestre es un problema sorprendentemente común, a menudo con enormes consecuencias tanto para los animales individualmente como para poblaciones enteras.
Cuando se piensa en el conflicto entre humanos y vida silvestre, es posible que inmediatamente se piense en los delitos contra la vida silvestre, lo cual no es incorrecto, ya que muchas regiones con problemas de delitos contra la vida silvestre, como la caza furtiva, también son áreas donde las personas suelen lidiar con el conflicto entre humanos y vida silvestre, lo que hace que ambos problemas estén estrechamente relacionados. Pero el conflicto entre humanos y vida silvestre es un problema mucho más amplio que abarca muchas maneras en que la presencia e interferencia humana pueden causar problemas tanto para nosotros como para los animales. El conflicto entre humanos y vida silvestre incluye:
- Elefantes pisoteando los cultivos de un agricultor, lo que provocó represalias.
- Los nuevos desarrollos inmobiliarios invaden los ecosistemas donde viven las especies depredadoras, lo que provoca que los depredadores tengan menos territorio y menos alimento, lo que a su vez lleva a que ataquen a los animales domésticos y al ganado.
- Las autopistas dividen el territorio de animales como los pumas, lo que provoca que la fauna silvestre se adentre en los barrios o muera atropellada por coches.
- Las balas de plomo utilizadas en la caza provocan que animales carroñeros como los cóndores mueran por envenenamiento por plomo.
Estos son solo algunos ejemplos de cómo los humanos pueden impactar negativamente la vida silvestre, y es evidente cómo muchos de estos escenarios podrían agravarse. Las soluciones al conflicto entre humanos y vida silvestre no solo incluyen maneras de prevenir estos problemas (por ejemplo, mediante el seguimiento de depredadores, el monitoreo de los territorios de las poblaciones o la construcción de barreras y pasos de vida silvestre monitoreados por sensores), sino también maneras de ayudar a las personas a conectar con la vida silvestre y aprender a convivir con ella.
Si te interesan las soluciones para prevenir el conflicto entre humanos y vida silvestre, únete a este grupo y conoce a las personas que trabajan para proteger y salvar especies en todo el mundo.
Imagen de cabecera: Casey Allen en Unsplash
Curadores del grupo
- @MandyEyrich
- | She/Her
University of Florida (UF)
Wildlife Conservation meets Experience Strategy -- 15+ years of cross-sector expertise specializing in user-centric technology and product strategy (UX research, UX/UI design), process optimization, and end-to-end agile product development, moving from ideation to iteration
- 0 Recursos
- 12 Discusiones
- 26 Grupos
Aún no se han agregado destacados a este grupo.
- @carlybatist
- | she/her
ecoacoustics, biodiversity monitoring, nature tech
- 133 Recursos
- 373 Discusiones
- 19 Grupos
- @StephODonnell
- | She / Her
Tech, Sustainable Finance at World Bank & CFA (prev. Founder WILDLABS)
- 197 Recursos
- 670 Discusiones
- 31 Grupos
Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB)
- 0 Recursos
- 0 Discusiones
- 5 Grupos
- @tom_august
- | he/him
Computational ecologist with interests in computer vision, citizen science, open science, drones, acoustics, data viz, software engineering, public engagement
- 9 Recursos
- 57 Discusiones
- 5 Grupos
- @Aurel
- | She/Her
Looking to reconcile biodiversity conservation and finance.
- 2 Recursos
- 1 Discusiones
- 10 Grupos
Building perimeter monitoring technology for protected areas with Safora
- 0 Recursos
- 1 Discusiones
- 10 Grupos
- @TaliaSpeaker
- | She/her
WILDLABS & World Wide Fund for Nature/ World Wildlife Fund (WWF)
I'm the Executive Manager of WILDLABS at WWF
- 28 Recursos
- 64 Discusiones
- 33 Grupos
Saint Louis Zoo
Solutions architect focused on geoAI and dataEng, currently building business intelligence and conservation tech for the Saint Louis Zoo
- 0 Recursos
- 23 Discusiones
- 13 Grupos
Committed to using technology, data and innovation to create efficient, safe and impactful solutions.
- 0 Recursos
- 0 Discusiones
- 16 Grupos
- @camilakass
- | She
Biologist, conservationist, and science communicator dedicated to protecting biodiversity through research, education, and community engagement.
- 0 Recursos
- 0 Discusiones
- 8 Grupos
WILDLABS & Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS)
I'm the Bioacoustics Research Analyst at WILDLABS. I'm a marine biologist with particular interest in the acoustics behavior of cetaceans. I'm also a backend web developer, hoping to use technology to improve wildlife conservation efforts.
- 53 Recursos
- 42 Discusiones
- 34 Grupos
- @Gliday
- | He/him
Save the Elephant
Research scientist (dual M.Sc.) leading AI-assisted wildlife survey modernisation at Save the Elephants and founder of Shamba AI — working at the intersection of Bioscience, conservation, data science, and AI
- 0 Recursos
- 0 Discusiones
- 7 Grupos
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3 R&D Projects
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Camera trap recommendations
2 April 2026 11:40pm
18 May 2026 6:18pm
Hi, are you looking to import these? Do you have any import tax considerations? This could impact which models you buy. I have been using Acorn models, very reliable and provide photo and 4K video with sound options.
Best wishes
Susan
6 June 2026 3:44am
Thank you everyone for your recommendations! We were awarded the grant, so I will share this information with our team, taking all your advice into consideration with our budget.
7 July 2026 1:20am
GP A60 Review is now up. See: https://winterberrywildlife.ouroneacrefarm.com/2026/05/23/gardepro-a60-trail-camera-teardown-and-review/
2nd International Conference on Human-Wildlife Conflict and Coexistence
2 July 2026 4:13pm
3 July 2026 7:06am
Exciting! Is there a link for it? Any details for vendors?
3 July 2026 2:33pm
Please find it in the header too: https://www.hwcconference.org
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1 July 2026 4:24pm
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1 July 2026 4:20pm
New "Human Dimensions" group on Wildlabs?
29 Mayo 2026 7:25pm
24 June 2026 7:37pm
Hi Matt,
I would definitely be interested in joining this group.
One thing I often find is that we spend a lot of time discussing technologies and ecological outcomes, but much less time discussing the social and institutional processes that ultimately shape whether those technologies succeed or fail.
I think a Human Dimensions group could be a great space to connect people working on governance, policy, stakeholder engagement, values, and other topics that are often spread across different communities.
Looking forward to seeing how this develops!
25 June 2026 12:59am
yes, this group is definitely needed!
26 June 2026 6:33pm
I would be interested
Senior Hardware Product Development Engineer - Conservation X Labs
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22 Mayo 2026 10:20am
Call for Collaboration: Share your voice at ICTC next week!
11 February 2026 3:29am
19 February 2026 3:35am
Hi Anna!
Is there anything that sparks your curiosity, which I can address for you? Take a look at the upcoming day 2 and day 3 sessions, and if you see anything that intrigues you, please let me know! I'll happily join the session that aligns, and share your thoughts! ☺️
Kind regards,
Mandy
13 May 2026 2:18pm
That's a great idea @MandyEyrich ! Similar to your idea, I wrote up an article with geospatial highlights from ICTC 2026: https://wildlabs.net/en/article/wildlabs-geospatial-group-ictc-2026.
Is the Human-Wildlife Coexistence article available yet? Would love to read it and share it with colleagues at Fauna & Flora.
13 May 2026 2:21pm
@annavallery here's the article with geospatial-ish highlights in case you're interested: https://wildlabs.net/en/article/wildlabs-geospatial-group-ictc-2026. Let me know if you have any questions or specific interests. Happy to share further details!
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Tiger coexistence challenges
20 April 2026 3:20am
2 May 2026 6:32am
Hi Mandy, writing from Indonesia where we manage the Sumatra Merang Peatland Project (SMPP) which is in a landscape supporting some of the last Sumatran tigers. Our project is part of a corridor including two national parks and a few scattered conservation areas within active oil palm and Acacia plantations. There's not a lot of room for tigers and they do range through human communities or come into contact with plantation workers.
Fatal attacks are rare but two occurred in 2022. We hold annual HWC trainings with communities but also celebrate International Tiger Day with them, having a light-hearted event with games, face paint, and education of the importance of biodiversity, even when scary. We emphasize common sense personal safety measures to reduce the potential for conflict. Luckily livestock aren't very common in this area so that conflict trigger is not a major issue. Mostly it's about restricting activity at dusk/night/dawn, travelling in groups, not running, etc. We haven't found any feasible tech options (tagging is beyond our scope/budget) but we do use camera traps to see if/when tigers are present in/around our project area. This can only do so much for HWC as it's not a rapid response tool but does indicate presence.
Regarding your question "Who/what parties should be held responsible for the loss of life, both human and tiger? Can they be held responsible?" there isn't an easy answer! Indonesian law technically gives tigers the same right-to-life as humans but in practice reprisals of course happen. In our region the military did respond to the 2022 events with patrols and presence, but they were not allowed to shoot. Obviously there is no proactive recourse against the tiger itself as a responsible party. It's an opportunity to redouble efforts on community education to explain why the attacks occurred (both fatalities were at forest frontiers, crouching with back to the forest, etc) and how to avoid re-occurrence!
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Ecological Data Scientist
21 April 2026 9:22pm
HWC online document library now live
11 July 2018 3:32pm
12 April 2026 6:32pm
We're still looking at the best option to deter warty pigs from raiding crops. I hope the answer to that is here somewhere in WILDLABS.
14 April 2026 4:30pm
Have you tried bees? Works with elephants.
15 April 2026 5:23am
That can be explored, yeah, but the thing with our warty pig here (the Mindoro Warty Pig) is that it's also an insectivore and is known to pillage termite and ant mounds-- and some of those can deliver quite painful bites. But yeah, thank you for the suggestion. It is indeed worth trying.
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Camera Trap Integration Webinar with Sensing Clues: Connecting Your Camera Traps with All Your Conservation Data
19 Marzo 2026 10:07am
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The NatureHelm team is headed to the Wilmot Field Day
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When should managers actively breach a temporarily closed estuary?
20 February 2026 10:16am
Ultrasound/Infrasound Deterrent for Bears
22 November 2025 11:50am
17 February 2026 10:07pm
I just saw this Mare. I hate to be negative but sometimes bad ideas are contrary to conservation and need to be put to rest. Myself and my company are one of the leaders in human-bear conflict (including being a founding member of the Human-Bear Conflict Workshop) and you can check any North American bear practicioner to confirm this.
This is a bad idea and it won't work. You need to do a more thorough reivew of the conflict literature before investigating the specifics of sound. Your method is that of a deterrent - deterrents only work when attractants are managed. Further, the specific deterrent effect you are proposing is much too mild. We occasionally can get temporary impacts from heavy duty pain stimulus like rubber bullets. Audio deterrent are a mild effect and only work in specific contexts for very short durations.
The only place in the world a comprehensive aversive conditioning program has worked entirely is Kananaskis Country in Canada - and that is because ALL non-natural bear attractants have been completely removed.
Within the context of Carpathian conflict, it is driven entirely by garbage access and roadside feeding, with backyard attractants only mattering for conservation when the first two have been dealt with. Obviously, this idea would only work on a fixed attractants - ie garbage dumps. I've seen female sows with cubs brave 20 adult male bears on garbage dumps (all of which will happily kill the cubs) to get a chance at feeding on garbage. A garbage feed bear can get more food in minutes than it could harvest on wild sources and they will brave death to do it. No deterrent can work without attractant management.
17 February 2026 10:08pm
In the context of the carpathians, it is garbage feed bears. Deterrents will not work at all as the attractant value is much too high.
18 February 2026 8:10am
That's a good point. In such context there is still value in trying to avoid one species harming another species through tech though. But I'm thinking here in terms of early detection with the goal that people don't accidentally wander into the area and get harmed and to be able to send security to the area on time to avoid an attack.
But I've seen the situation you describe Jared in Romania, not in the mountains but a town close by. Lots of fast food joints, often unlicensed. And I understand the politics and culture essentially made the removal of the attractants something that was just not going to happen. Lots of people would walk through the domain at night and I've seen video of people walking hand in hand with a family of bears behind them of which they were completely unaware. The location did have security and cameras but the areas was just so vast that it was not possible manually be able to keep on top of it all. So here detecting bears early before they reach the place where people are and alerting security can definately be helpful.
I also think that simply setting off unpleasant things automatically when a bear is detected is a bad idea.
I think that in cases where an electronic deterrence maybe might make more sense, such as in an imminent and active attack from wolves on live stock (as opposed to wolves simply travelling past a location), the response should also be an interactive response by people. and ideally also be followed up by people going to the site. By imminent attack I mean seeing a wolve trying to dig under a fence, or attempting to jump over a fence. Unnecessary usage of some kind of electronic response just make's it less effective later (The boy who cried wolf?). Plus, it's all part of being fair to animals that we co-exist with.
With bears indeed I expect it's pretty much all as you describe above Jared, early warning to a trained responder make's more sense if the problem cannot be "solved" properly.
Jared, do you have experience with early warning detection systems to trained responders?
I think that the whole tech relating to good enough early warning detection systems is still in it's infancy. (In this case, my company is one of the leading companies in this tech :-) ) My tech itself is not really in it's infancy, it evolved a 13 year period, 6 years with AI, but field installations of the tech definately still is. In the case of bears, I only have one installation and it's in Greenland. And very much works as alerting a first responder.
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13 February 2026 12:45pm
Women in Conservation Forum: 3 Weeks Today!!
9 February 2026 1:31am
11 February 2026 2:16am
Hi Macayle! My assumption is that this is an in-person only event...yes? If there is an option to join remotely or listen in, please do follow up and share with our Community! I would personally love to attend, and I am sure many others would as well! And if there may be any content that is publicized post the event, please do share that as well. :) Sounds like a fantastic initiative -- thank you for sharing! Cheers!
Co-Create Conservation Tech: Features, Fixes & Roadmap Workshop "Cluey" with Sensing Clues
10 February 2026 8:07am
“Remember You Are Wild” learning session on Feb 16 - with the team behind My Octopus Teacher
3 February 2026 5:21am
11 February 2026 2:49am
This is amazing! Would love to join, however your event conflicts with the upcoming ICTC for WILDLABS. :(
Is there an opportunity to review your session after the LIVE event?
Thank you for sharing!
11 March 2026 8:55pm
I can send you the recording if you like :-) - reach out directly as I don't seem to get a notification if someone comments on the post....
Women in Conservation Forum (WiCF) 2nd March in Nairobi: GoFundMe platform
30 Enero 2026 5:14am
30 January 2026 10:52am
Hello Macayle
It is of great pleasure that there is this opportunity coming to East Africa. I would like to attend this. Do you have any recommendation for funding a student to attend such a forum? I will share this opportunity with our East Africa WhatsApp group too.
2 February 2026 2:33am
Hi Susan,
Thank you for your message.
I apologise, but as we are a non-profit and mostly volunteer-run, we are presently unable to provide funding support to people to travel to Nairobi for the forum.
Thank you for sharing WiCF with the whatsapp community; that’s lovely of you!
I can write up an official letter of invitation if that would help with a university bursary application, and WiCF attendees will receive a certificate of attendance for the day.
I have a small invitation flyer; feel free to share this with others who may be interested.
Kind regards,
Macayle