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Sustainable Environment
An international journal of environmental health and sustainability
Volume 10, 2024 - Issue 1
192
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Environmental Health

Concomitant nexus assessment between the environment and health of wildlife in Hwange urban green spaces

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Article: 2330777 | Received 04 Apr 2023, Accepted 11 Mar 2024, Published online: 18 Mar 2024
 

ABSTRACT

Urban green spaces (UGS) mitigate negative impacts of urban living and provide positive effects on citizens’ mood, health and well-being. The net effect of UGS on wildlife health and human welfare remains understudied in urban zones proximal to wildlife rich areas. This study assessed the concomitant relationship between the environment and health of wildlife in Hwange Town in Zimbabwe through a questionnaire survey from June—December 2022. This study aimed to: i) assess the local perceptions on the link between urban ecology and urban ecosystems relative to wildlife health, ii) determine the local perceptions on the changes in the areal extent of green spaces, and iii) examine local perceptions towards green spaces and human-wildlife conflict in Hwange Town. Locals indicated that agricultural activities, urbanisation, mining and poaching were destroying and polluting the natural habitat. Increased magnitude, impact and frequency of wildlife-human conflicts signals increasing depletion of green spaces and expansion of urbanisation into wildlife habitats. There was no statistically significant correlation (r = 0.088; p = 0.172) in the local perceptions on the relation between ecosystem and well-being of wildlife. The urban ecosystem mosaic complex is unpredictable, heterogenous and evolving with human activities imploring a need for optimisation of human-activities and wildlife wellbeing. However, without financial and infrastructural support local communities are unable to conserve wildlife. We suggest community-based wildlife protection programmes integrating citizen science data (local ecological knowledge) using existing information communication platforms as alternative options to sustain wildlife conservation in urban green spaces in wildlife rich developing towns.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Ethical clearance

The ethical clearance for this research was obtained from the Hwange Rural District Council under which the study area falls in.

Data availability statement

We have deposited the raw results in SPSS format as the Supplementary Data for the study.