17 results on '"Heinen, Joel T."'
Search Results
2. Research priorities for the conservation of Nepal's lesser terrestrial vertebrates.
- Author
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Heinen, Joel T. and Dahal, Sagar
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VERTEBRATES , *CONSERVATION biology , *SPECIES diversity , *BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
Located along the boundary of two zoogeographic provinces, and with the highest peaks and deepest valleys on Earth, Nepal is a center of adaptive radiation for many taxa. Early zoological research was mostly focused on high-profile large mammals due to availability of funding and policy priorities, but knowledge gaps remain for most other vertebrate taxa. Technologies ranging from genetic mapping to GPS, GIS, digital cameras and microtransmitters have advanced with time and greatly expanded research capacities. Here, we present our suggestions of research needs for the lesser terrestrial vertebrate fauna of Nepal and the broader Himalayan region, pointing out knowledge gaps and suggesting where to go from here. The growing numbers of Nepali researchers focusing on small mammalian and avian research is encouraging, but the status of many taxa remains unknown and much of the country remains under-surveyed for breeding and migratory populations. Major knowledge gaps persist for reptiles and amphibians and for the role of local wildlife markets in exploitation. We conclude with suggestions on priorities for research on, and conservation of, Nepal's lesser terrestrial vertebrates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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3. Integrated conservation and development project life cycles in the Annapurna Conservation Area, Nepal: Is development overpowering conservation?
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Baral, Nabin, Stern, Marc J., and Heinen, Joel T.
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- 2007
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4. A review of conservation legislation in Nepal: Past progress and future needs
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Heinen, Joel T and Kattel, Bijaya
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- 1992
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5. Trends, patterns, and networks of illicit wildlife trade in Nepal: A national synthesis.
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Paudel, Prakash K., Acharya, Krishna Prasad, Baral, Hem Sagar, Heinen, Joel T., and Jnawali, Shant Raj
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WILD animal trade ,ENDANGERED species ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,RHINOCEROS (Genus) - Abstract
Illicit wildlife trade may have devastating consequences for Nepal's wildlife populations given its increasing national and global connectivity and proximity with large Indian and Chinese markets. Despite its potential impacts, our understanding about trends, patterns and networks of illicit wildlife trade in Nepal is very limited. Here, we provide a thorough and comprehensive national assessment of such trade in Nepal using 5 years (2011 through 2015) of data on wildlife seizures and arrests (n = 830) collected from 73 districts. Nearly 87% of arrests included seizures, and globally threatened species were confiscated from 56% of total arrests. There were increasing trends of arrest cases over the time period for all species (p = 0.03), leopards (p = 0.02) and red pandas (p = 0.002), and a decreasing trend for rhinoceros (p = 0.04). Seizures of multiple species—especially tigers, leopards, and pangolin—in arrest cases were suggestive of international organized criminal linkages, whereas individual small‐scale seizures were likely for local, species‐specific markets. The trade networks suggested connections between species core habitats (poaching sites), cities (collection sites), and transit routes between India and China (international markets). Our results show that wildlife trade, except for rhinoceros, is increasing and trade nodes along districts bordering China and India are suggestive of large, international networks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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6. Think globally, act locally: On the status of the threatened fauna in the Central Himalaya of Nepal.
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Paudel, Prakash Kumar and Heinen, Joel T.
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ENDANGERED species ,WILDLIFE conservation ,ANIMAL classification - Abstract
The World Conservation Union (IUCN) publishes the Red List of Threatened Species, the most authoritative information available globally on the conservation status of species. However, the status of globally threatened species remains controversial at local levels because many of them are not protected as part of national statutory law. Such anomalies are examples of controversies in implementing the much-hyped environmental slogan “think globally, act locally”. Here we provide a comparative review between globally threatened species as listed by the IUCN Red List found in Nepal and those of nationally protected species under Nepalese law. We discovered a significantly higher diversity of globally threatened mammals and birds in Nepal than would be expected relative to their global ratios. We established remarkable disparities in species conservation in Nepal: (1) a large number (an average of 85% of species of five taxonomic groups: mammals, birds, amphibians, fishes and reptiles) of IUCN-listed globally threatened species found in Nepal are not protected by national law; (2) most protected species listed are mammals (70%), but more than half of globally-threatened mammals found in Nepal are not protected; and (3) amphibians and fish are not protected, although they represent 12% of the total number of globally-threatened species found in the country. Such large gaps in Nepalese conservation law are an indication of unresponsive and inefficient conservation planning. The Government of Nepal and international conservation partners should: (1) emphasize knowledge-based conservation strategies for all taxonomic groups; and (2) prioritize updating the lists of protected species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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7. Conservation planning in the Nepal Himalayas: Effectively (re)designing reserves for heterogeneous landscapes.
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Paudel, Prakash Kumar and Heinen, Joel T.
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ENVIRONMENTAL protection , *LANDSCAPES , *NATURE reserves , *SPECIES diversity , *PROTECTED areas , *ECOLOGICAL heterogeneity - Abstract
Landscapes consisting of heterogeneous environmental conditions (e.g. elevational gradients) are richer in species diversity than more homogeneous landscapes. Furthermore, the importance of heterogeneous landscapes has been widely acknowledged in biodiversity conservation due to expected elevational shifts in ranges as a result of climate change. This is especially important in mountainous landscapes. There is as yet no protocol that conservation planners can use to integrate landscape heterogeneity in the design of protected area (PAs) systems. In this study, we tested whether Nepal, as a whole, consists of highly heterogeneous landscapes in term of elevation, and whether heterogeneity of PAs is correlated with their size and species diversity. We developed a conservation index of elevational zones within Nepal to evaluate their representativeness in the protected area system. The results showed that, in Nepal's PAs, indices of elevational heterogeneity were strongly associated with species richness. However, heterogeneity indices were not strongly associated with sizes of PAs despite the fact that Nepal is a highly heterogeneous country. The same is true for national parks and conservation areas based on IUCN-The World Conservation Union's categories of PAs. The conservation index of elevation zones suggested a bias in reserve selection towards higher elevations. There is an urgent need to rectify past biases in reserve design so as to ensure protection of elevational heterogeneity during conservation planning, especially in these times of human-induced climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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8. Decentralization and people's participation in conservation: a comparative study from the Western Terai of Nepal.
- Author
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Baral, Nabin and Heinen, Joel T.
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CONSERVATION of natural resources , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *DECENTRALIZATION in management , *HOUSEHOLDS , *NATIONAL parks & reserves , *SURVEYS - Abstract
Nepal formally embarked on decentralized participatory conservation programmes in 1990. To assess who participates in and benefits from such programmes, stratified random questionnaire surveys of 234 households and interviews with 29 user group chairs were conducted in the buffer zones of two protected areas of the Nepalese Terai: Bardia National Park and Suklaphanta Wildlife Reserve. The Poisson regression shows that gender, education, household affluence, and conservation attitudes were significant predictors of people's participation in decentralized conservation programmes, while family size, ethnicity and resource dependency were not. The benefits of participation outweighed the costs based on respondents' estimates. The performance of grassroots organizations and levels of participation were correlated. Nepal's decentralized participatory conservation has achieved efficiency, relative equity and effectiveness to some extent. Yet the central government should devolve more power to local communities to sustain the achievements as well as to provide more equitable benefits to residents to ensure the effectiveness and sustainability of conservation programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2007
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9. A community analysis of sal (Shorea robusta) forests in the western Terai of Nepal.
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Timilsina, Nilesh, Ross, Michael S., and Heinen, Joel T.
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FORESTS & forestry ,SHOREA robusta ,ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature ,TREES - Abstract
Abstract: Sal (Shorea robusta) forest is found in an extensive array of conditions in lowland Nepal, and has been heavily used by both government and local people. Thus, we did a study to provide information on sal forests occupying a broad range of historical and environmental influences across an extensive range in the western Terai of Nepal and explore factors – both environmental and anthropogenic – that may be responsible for variation of forest structure. Trees, saplings, seedlings and shrubs were sampled along transects (2km long) in two protected areas and two proposed community forests. The protected areas had three transects each, and a single transect covered two proposed community forests. Samplings were done every 200m along the transects, a plotless technique sampled trees (>5cm dbh). With tree sampling point as the center, shrubs and saplings (1–5cm dbh and >1m height) were sampled in 5m radius circular plots and herbs and seedlings (<1m height) were sampled in 1m
2 circular plots nested within shrub plots. Altogether 131 species were recorded: 28 trees, 10 shrubs, 6 climbers and 87 herbs. The mean density across all plots was 220trees/ha and the average basal area was 13.2m2 /ha. Three different associations of sal forest were identified by cluster analysis. Community types distinguished in the classification analysis were clearly separated in the site ordination. None of the environmental variables measured (pH, percent organic matter, total nitrogen, available phosphorous, available potassium and soil texture) explained the distribution of plots in the site ordination. We concluded that rainfall and past disturbances (fire and anthropogenic use) are mainly responsible for different community types. Community types were different in structure and composition, thereby representing unique entities. The protection and maintenance of each of the different communities through forest management is important for biodiversity conservation. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]- Published
- 2007
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10. Resources use, conservation attitudes, management intervention and park-people relations in the Western Terai landscape of Nepal.
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BARAL, NABIN and HEINEN, JOEL T.
- Abstract
Various conservation models have been implemented in Nepal since 1973, however their impacts on resources use and conservation attitudes are scarcely known. To address the hypothesis that conservation attitudes should improve around protected areas (PAs) with more social and economic interventions, stratified random questionnaire surveys of 234 households were conducted in two PAs in the Western Terai of Nepal: Bardia National Park (BNP), in which interventions have been more widespread for longer time periods, and Sukla Phanta Wildlife Reserve (SWR), in which interventions are relatively recent. Both are part of a major landscape-level conservation programme under implementation in Nepal, and both are under threat of political turmoil, uncontrolled immigration, inefficient land reform policies and unsustainable resource use. There was spatio-temporal variability in resource use patterns and dependence. People collected eight and seven types of resources in BNP and SWR, respectively, and people in BNP were more dependent on resources overall. About 72% of respondents mentioned the problem of inadequate firewood, and suggested the promotion of alternative energy and permission to collect from PAs as mitigating strategies. Of 11 attitude statements, five significantly differed between the two areas. Respondents from the BNP had more favourable attitudes about conservation than those from SWR, supporting the main hypothesis. Training received by respondents, damage by wildlife, dependence on resources and satisfaction towards user groups contributed significantly to the variation in conservation attitudes. The results suggest that the liberalization of PA management has enabled the use of resources, improved livelihoods to some extent and solicited more favourable conservation attitudes in Nepal. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2007
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11. Threats to a small population: a census and conservation recommendations for wild buffalo Bubalus arnee in Nepal.
- Author
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Heinen, Joel T. and Kandel, Ramchandra
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ANIMAL populations , *WATER buffalo , *ENDANGERED species , *HABITATS , *WILDLIFE conservation , *ANIMAL dispersal , *ANIMAL ecology , *FIELD research - Abstract
We censused wild buffalo Bubalus arnee in Koshi Tappu Wildlife Reserve, Nepal, in March 2004 using methods employed in earlier surveys, and estimated a population of 159 animals. Since the last census in 2000 the management situation has deteriorated. Guard posts have been evacuated due to the Maoist insurgency. The entire Army Battalion usually posted in the Reserve was at Headquarters at the time of this study and therefore there were no patrols over most of the Reserve, and much human encroachment. Mortality from flooding and road deaths, and possibly poaching for meat, were evident, and males suffered more mortality overall than females. Despite these threats the population had increased since 2000, albeit at a lower rate than previously. Active management, including interventions within the Reserve and a translocation of some individuals to Chitwan National Park, are recommended. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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12. The Maoist people's war and conservation in Nepal.
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Baral, Nabin and Heinen, Joel T.
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CONSERVATION of natural resources , *BIODIVERSITY , *PARK reservation systems , *MILITARY assistance , *NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,NEPALESE Civil War, 1996-2006 ,DEVELOPING island countries - Abstract
Civil wars are frequent in lesser-developed nations, wherein is harbored a disproportionate share of the world's biodiversity. These wars have had serious detrimental effects, direct and indirect, on conservation programs. From 2001 to 2005, we conducted site visits, personal interviews, and document searches bearing upon this problem as exemplified by Nepal's ongoing Maoist insurgency. Cases of insurgents usurping full control of several protected areas have come to light, as has a rapid increase in poaching and illicit wildlife trade nation-wide. Staff and infrastructure of conservation agencies and non-governmental organizations have been attacked. The Nepalese situation invites reassessment of traditional ‘fortresses-and-fines’ conservation strategies as well as more modern ‘community-based’ approaches that require local governmental offices to remain functional. Also called into question is the role of military force in the protection of parks and reserves. In times of civil strife, we conclude, robust conservation may most likely be achieved by nongovernmental organizations that are politically neutral and financially independent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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13. On the expansion of species protection in Nepal: Advances and pitfalls of new efforts to implement and comply with CITES.
- Author
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Heinen, Joel T. and Chapagain, Diwakar P.
- Abstract
The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) has proven particularly difficult to implement due to the complex legal requirements that it imposes on its parties. As with many other nations, Nepal lacks national implementing legislation, which has greatly hindered compliance with the treaty's provisions in the country and, indirectly, in the region. Here we explore several case studies of actual and potential CITES violations in Nepal that have come to light in the past decade, and review new draft legislation that is designed to implement the Convention and close gaps in enforcement. We predict that some gaps will remain regarding implementation and compliance with CITES in Nepal, and make several recommendations to address these issues via rule‐making procedures during the formulation of Regulations and via the actions of the CITES Coordination Council, a provision in the draft Act that is designed to improve cross‐sectoral cooperation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2002
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14. Does Community-Based Conservation Shape Favorable Attitudes Among Locals? An Empirical Study from Nepal.
- Author
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Mehta, Jai N. and Heinen, Joel T.
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CONSERVATION of natural resources ,TOURISM ,INCOME ,SERVICE industries ,TRAINING - Abstract
Like many developing countries, Nepal has adopted a community-based conservation (CBC) approach in recent years to manage its protected areas mainly in response to poor park–people relations. Among other things, under this approach the government has created new “people-oriented” conservation areas, formed and devolved legal authority to grassroots-level institutions to manage local resources, fostered infrastructure development, promoted tourism, and provided income-generating trainings to local people. Of interest to policy-makers and resource managers in Nepal and worldwide is whether this approach to conservation leads to improved attitudes on the part of local people. It is also important to know if personal costs and benefits associated with various intervention programs, and socioeconomic and demographic characteristics influence these attitudes. We explore these questions by looking at the experiences in Annapurna and Makalu-Barun Conservation Areas, Nepal, which have largely adopted a CBC approach in policy formulation, planning, and management. The research was conducted during 1996 and 1997; the data collection methods included random household questionnaire surveys, informal interviews, and review of official records and published literature. The results indicated that the majority of local people held favorable attitudes toward these conservation areas. Logistic regression results revealed that participation in training, benefit from tourism, wildlife depredation issue, ethnicity, gender, and education level were the significant predictors of local attitudes in one or the other conservation area. We conclude that the CBC approach has potential to shape favorable local attitudes and that these attitudes will be mediated by some personal attributes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2001
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15. Parks, people, and conservation: a review of management issues in Nepal's protected areas
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Heinen, Joel T. and Kattel, Bijaya
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CONSERVATION of natural resources - Published
- 1992
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16. A new look at the Himalayan fur trade
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Leisure, Blair and Heinen, Joel T.
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FUR trade ,WILDLIFE conservation - Published
- 1993
17. Institutional Resilience of Community-based Conservation to the Maoist Insurgency in Nepal
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Baral, Nabin, Forestry, Stern, Marc J., Heinen, Joel T., Hammett, Alfred L. Tom, and Hull, Robert Bruce IV
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protected areas management ,community-based conservation ,governance ,Nepal ,Adaptive cycle ,resilience ,Annapurna ,capital stocks - Abstract
To explore the institutional resilience of community-based conservation, I undertook empirical research in the Annapurna Conservation Area (ACA), Nepal, a protected area managed by the Annapurna Conservation Area Project (ACAP) and local communities organized into 56 Conservation Area Management Committees (CAMCs). I conducted scripted interviews with 212 members of 30 representative CAMCs, 13 ACAP staff members who closely monitor those CAMCs, and 868 local villagers who are the beneficiaries of the conservation programs. The field research was undertaken during the summer of 2007 and fall of 2008. Both quantitative and qualitative data were collected and analyzed. I estimated capital stocks and assessed the organizational resilience of each CAMC during and following the Maoist insurgency. I used confirmatory factor analysis to develop scales for measuring the two theoretical constructs of legitimacy and institutional resilience, the latter of which refers to the overall system of community-based conservation in the area. I used the adaptive cycle framework of growth, maturation, collapse and reorganization to assess changes in structures and processes and to explore the past, present and possible future trends in ACA. Villagers largely considered the CAMCs as legitimate institutions, and their executive members as trustworthy. CAMC members understood the organizational mission and were confident about assuming greater management responsibility of the area in the near future. Human and social capital stocks were positively related to the resilience of the CAMCs. Particularly, themes of intra-committee trust, help networks, and the duration of members' tenure on the committees were important. Furthermore, natural capital stocks showed a parabolic relationship with organizational resilience; the most resilient CAMCs had moderate amounts of natural capital under their jurisdictions. The scales used to measure legitimacy and institutional resilience were reliable, and showed a significant positive correlation with each other. Five variables significantly predicted the villagers' perceptions of legitimacy: performance assessments of CAMCs, social norms as measured by perceptions of peers' attitudes towards CAMCs, empowerment as measured by villagers' perceptions of their influence in the CAMCs' decision making processes, perceived benefits and costs associated with having the CAMC in a village, and reported levels of personal participation in CAMCs' activities. The conservation institution appeared to have been resilient to the insurgency, as the system maintained its identity throughout, avoided alternative undesirable states, and entered into the reorganization phase following collapse. All forms of capital and institutional performance decreased to some extent during collapse but institutional memory, available capital and some structural changes facilitated reorganization. The institutional system is reorganizing along the original regime, but it has also developed an alternative pathway of a new governance model for the area that will transform the present regime in the near term. Ph. D.
- Published
- 2009
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