Title of article :
Public choice of species for the ‘Ark’: Phylogenetic similarity and preferred wildlife species for survival
Author/Authors :
Tisdell، نويسنده , , Clem and Wilson، نويسنده , , Clevo and Swarna Nantha، نويسنده , , Hemanath، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
9
From page :
97
To page :
105
Abstract :
Summary play a role in deciding the fate of species in the current extinction wave. Because of the Similarity Principle, physical attractiveness and likeability, it has been argued that public choice favours the survival of species that satisfy these criteria at the expense of other species. This paper empirically tests this argument by considering a hypothetical ‘Ark’ situation. Surveys of 204 members of the Australian public inquired whether they are in favour of the survival of each of 24 native mammal, bird and reptile species (prior to and after information provision about each species). The species were ranked by percentage of ‘yes’ votes received. Species composition by taxon in various fractions of the ranking was determined. If the Similarity Principle holds, mammals should rank highly and dominate the top fractions of animals saved in the hierarchical list. We find that although mammals would be over-represented in the ‘Ark’, birds and reptiles are unlikely to be excluded when social choice is based on numbers ‘voting’ for the survival of each species. Support for the Similarity Principle is apparent particularly after information provision. Public policy implications of this are noted and recommendations are given.
Keywords :
Conservation , Likeability of species , Similarity principle , Social choice , Attractiveness of species , Biological diversity , Australian wildlife , Communities of species
Journal title :
Journal for Nature Conservation
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Journal for Nature Conservation
Record number :
2230917
Link To Document :
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