Social values shape biodiversity conservation success. Yet information is lacking on how values form, change and adapt people to their environment. Our 33-nation survey in 2021–2023 (n = 18,477) explored the effect of the institutions of European colonization on present-day values towards wildlife in the Americas. Here we found mutualism values (seeing wildlife as part of one’s social community) prevail in Iberian-origin Latin American countries, whereas domination values (seeing wildlife as a resource for human use) are more prevalent in British-origin North American countries. Multilevel analysis showed significant country-level effects of colonial institution (for example, colonial origin, Protestant versus Catholic religious cultures) and endowment (for example, pre-colonial population density, Indigenous ancestry, settler mortality) factors on wildlife values in the Americas. The strong mutualism emphasis in Latin America appears to be consistent with acculturation between the compatible ideologies of Indigenous peoples and the Iberian colonizers. The effectiveness of wildlife institutions and policies will depend on their congruence with the social values of publics being served.

Enduring cultural legacies affect Euro-American wildlife values / Manfredo, M.J., Teel, T.L., Ghasemi, B., Tran, T., Arbieu, U., Berl, R.E.W., Biggs, D., Boitani, L., Ciucci, P., Delibes-Mateos, M., Di Minin, E., Dressel, S., Gamborg, C., Glikman, J.A., Hill, C., Jacobs, M., Jensen, F.S., Kavčič, I., Keller, R., Marchini, S., et al.. - In: NATURE SUSTAINABILITY. - ISSN 2398-9629. - (2026), pp. 1-14. [10.1038/s41893-026-01825-8]

Enduring cultural legacies affect Euro-American wildlife values

Boitani, Luigi
Conceptualization
;
Ciucci, Paolo
Conceptualization
;
Glikman, Jenny Anne;Nanni, Sofia;
2026

Abstract

Social values shape biodiversity conservation success. Yet information is lacking on how values form, change and adapt people to their environment. Our 33-nation survey in 2021–2023 (n = 18,477) explored the effect of the institutions of European colonization on present-day values towards wildlife in the Americas. Here we found mutualism values (seeing wildlife as part of one’s social community) prevail in Iberian-origin Latin American countries, whereas domination values (seeing wildlife as a resource for human use) are more prevalent in British-origin North American countries. Multilevel analysis showed significant country-level effects of colonial institution (for example, colonial origin, Protestant versus Catholic religious cultures) and endowment (for example, pre-colonial population density, Indigenous ancestry, settler mortality) factors on wildlife values in the Americas. The strong mutualism emphasis in Latin America appears to be consistent with acculturation between the compatible ideologies of Indigenous peoples and the Iberian colonizers. The effectiveness of wildlife institutions and policies will depend on their congruence with the social values of publics being served.
2026
wildlife; human dimension; values; religion; ethics
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Enduring cultural legacies affect Euro-American wildlife values / Manfredo, M.J., Teel, T.L., Ghasemi, B., Tran, T., Arbieu, U., Berl, R.E.W., Biggs, D., Boitani, L., Ciucci, P., Delibes-Mateos, M., Di Minin, E., Dressel, S., Gamborg, C., Glikman, J.A., Hill, C., Jacobs, M., Jensen, F.S., Kavčič, I., Keller, R., Marchini, S., et al.. - In: NATURE SUSTAINABILITY. - ISSN 2398-9629. - (2026), pp. 1-14. [10.1038/s41893-026-01825-8]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1767914
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