NEW FULL PAPER AVAILABLE: Examining attention given to threats to elephant conservation on social media

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Mon, Aug 15, 2022 5:09 PM

Examining attention given to threats to elephant conservation on social
mediaNiall L. Hammond, Amy Dickman & Duan BiggsConservation Science and
PracticeAugust 11, 2022Abstract

Although social media is growing rapidly as a news source, including for
disseminating conservation information, studies comparing attention given
to differing threats to species on social media are almost non-existent. As
the amount of attention given to differing threats can influence what
people perceive to be important and impact the formation of environmental
policies, it is vital that conservationists understand which issues are
being discussed online. Using elephants (Loxodonta Africana, Loxodonta
cyclotis, and Elephas maximus) as test species, we conducted a content
analysis of tweets about elephants posted to Twitter during 2019. According
to the global conservation authority, the International Union for
Conservation of Nature, the most pressing threats to the conservation of
wild elephant populations are habitat loss, human-elephant conflict, and
poaching, with the magnitude of each threat differing between the three
species of elephants. Our Twitter analysis revealed that these major
threats were infrequently discussed, with habitat loss being the most
infrequently discussed (<1% of all tweets). Instead, elephant welfare
issues, such as tourist elephant rides, were the most frequently discussed
topic (23%). Users from non-elephant range countries were the dominant
voice on Twitter (72% of tweets with an identifiable location), with these
tweets likely to discuss elephant welfare concerns and trophy hunting,
which is not a threat to elephant conservation. Conversely, tweets from
users from African elephant range countries (14%) were more likely to
discuss human-elephant conflict, poaching, and promote elephant tourism.
Similarly, users from Asian elephant range countries (13%) were likely to
discuss human-elephant conflict and elephant tourism but unlikely to tweet
about poaching. Given the relatively low representation of local
stakeholders and the limited coverage of key conservation threats, there is
a need to ensure that social media discussions do not overly influence
decision-makers.

FULL PAPER
PDFhttps://drive.google.com/file/d/15DVr_6OZZY246UOOq8F6SDsSjxYHrWVM/view?usp=sharing
https://drive.google.com/file/d/15DVr_6OZZY246UOOq8F6SDsSjxYHrWVM/view?usp=sharingFULL
PAPER WEB LINKhttps://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/csp2.12785
https://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/csp2.12785

*Examining attention given to threats to elephant conservation on social mediaNiall L. Hammond, Amy Dickman & Duan BiggsConservation Science and PracticeAugust 11, 2022Abstract* Although social media is growing rapidly as a news source, including for disseminating conservation information, studies comparing attention given to differing threats to species on social media are almost non-existent. As the amount of attention given to differing threats can influence what people perceive to be important and impact the formation of environmental policies, it is vital that conservationists understand which issues are being discussed online. Using elephants (Loxodonta Africana, Loxodonta cyclotis, and Elephas maximus) as test species, we conducted a content analysis of tweets about elephants posted to Twitter during 2019. According to the global conservation authority, the International Union for Conservation of Nature, the most pressing threats to the conservation of wild elephant populations are habitat loss, human-elephant conflict, and poaching, with the magnitude of each threat differing between the three species of elephants. Our Twitter analysis revealed that these major threats were infrequently discussed, with habitat loss being the most infrequently discussed (<1% of all tweets). Instead, elephant welfare issues, such as tourist elephant rides, were the most frequently discussed topic (23%). Users from non-elephant range countries were the dominant voice on Twitter (72% of tweets with an identifiable location), with these tweets likely to discuss elephant welfare concerns and trophy hunting, which is not a threat to elephant conservation. Conversely, tweets from users from African elephant range countries (14%) were more likely to discuss human-elephant conflict, poaching, and promote elephant tourism. Similarly, users from Asian elephant range countries (13%) were likely to discuss human-elephant conflict and elephant tourism but unlikely to tweet about poaching. Given the relatively low representation of local stakeholders and the limited coverage of key conservation threats, there is a need to ensure that social media discussions do not overly influence decision-makers. *FULL PAPER PDFhttps://drive.google.com/file/d/15DVr_6OZZY246UOOq8F6SDsSjxYHrWVM/view?usp=sharing <https://drive.google.com/file/d/15DVr_6OZZY246UOOq8F6SDsSjxYHrWVM/view?usp=sharing>FULL PAPER WEB LINKhttps://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/csp2.12785 <https://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/csp2.12785>*