Abstract - Mongolia and North America contain expansive grassland ecosystems that remain sparsely
populated, dominated by agriculture, and support relatively isolated human communities dependent on natural
resources. Until recently Mongolians raised livestock using extensive pastoralism without seriously threatening
most of the region’s biodiversity. Yet that changed rapidly following the recent transition from a communist,
command-control economy to a democratic, free-market economy. The main challenges to protecting biodiversity
on grasslands in Mongolia include overgrazing, poaching, mining, and inadequate management, training,
and resources. Mongolia and the Great Plains both retain great opportunities for biodiversity conservation that
could also benefit local people. Mongolia has begun embracing nature-based tourism as a means of providing
additional jobs and enhanced livelihoods to local communities on its steppe grasslands. Nature-based tourism
development in Mongolia may provide a model for conserving biodiversity in the Great Plains. Similar developments
are beginning in the Great Plains but have focused primarily on big game hunting and dude ranches.
Expanding the model in the Great Plains to include Native American cultures and wildlife viewing may offer
alternatives that help restore biodiversity and enhance livelihoods.
Publisher - Center for Great Plains Studies, University of Nebraska–Lincoln
Reprints - contact Denver Zoo Conservation Biology Department
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