Canids across the world are involved in negative interactions between humans and their interests, with numerous examples of conflict management. K’gari (Fraser Island) and its dingo population are well known for the human-dingo conflict in the tourism and residential scenes. In this article, the successful management of such interactions is described through six key lessons learnt from over 20 years of adaptive management and its evolution into the current Fraser Island Dingo Conservation and Risk Management Strategy. These are (1) focus on people first, (2) understand local dingo ecology, (3) identify the pathway to intervention, (4) target dingo impacts, and prioritise behaviours and individuals, (5) work to a strategy (adaptive management), and (6) collaborate and engage with external stakeholders. This best-practice approach may be useful to managers of other populations of canids.
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Research Article|
February 02 2021
Best-practice dingo management: six lessons from K’gari (Fraser Island)
Linda Behrendorff
Queensland Parks and Wildlife Service, Department of Environment and Science, K’gari-Fraser Island, Queensland 4581, Australia; and
University of Queensland, School of Agriculture and Food Sciences, Gatton, Queensland 4343, Australia
University of Queensland, School of Agriculture and Food Sciences, Gatton, Queensland 4343, Australia
Email: [email protected]
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Australian Zoologist (2021) 41 (3): 521–533.
Citation
Linda Behrendorff; Best-practice dingo management: six lessons from K’gari (Fraser Island). Australian Zoologist 28 October 2021; 41 (3): 521–533. doi: https://doi.org/10.7882/AZ.2021.001
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