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Bushmeat in Ghana: consumer profiles may point the way to conservation

The bushmeat trade – meat from wild animals – continues to soar, mainly in unregulated and illegal markets worldwide. Ghana is one such market. One reason is that it’s a source of income for poor rural households.

It’s also an important source of nutrition. In West and Central Africa, bushmeat contributes about 80%-90% of the animal protein needs in certain rural areas.

Previous studies of bushmeat consumption in Ghana have focused narrowly on a few cities. My colleagues and I conducted a study to broaden the scope to urban and rural households in Ghana’s three major ecological zones. We aimed to analyse individual consumer demographies and provide insights on different consumer segments. This could be used for public campaigns to change behaviours or promote domesticated bushmeat for sustainable forestry management.

The study revealed some differences in consumption between regions. It also led us to recommend safe meat harvesting strategies for conservationists.

Segmenting markets and consumers

The study was conducted in the three main ecological zones of Ghana. These are the high forest, transitional and savannah zones. The high forest zone has forest reserves containing species that are important for biodiversity in Ghana. A variety of wild game is hunted as bushmeat for the major markets in these areas.

The transitional zone has attributes of both the high forest and savannah zones. The Techiman market is located here, and because it is geographically a link between the north and south of Ghana, a high inflow of bushmeat is traded in this market.

In the savannah zone, we looked at Sene West, a district that has a major market centre and a national park.

In total, we interviewed 400 consumers. We focused on 14 variables including age, education, gender, household size, job and religion. People’s feelings about nutrition, taste, disease, fear of poisoning and bushmeat preference were considered. We also looked at the price and availability of bushmeat.

About 67% of the respondents were bushmeat consumers. The most preferred bushmeat was grasscutter, a type of cane rat. Two antelope species (Maxwell’s duiker and black duiker) were also popular.

Three variables were associated with not eating bushmeat: price, the age of the person, and their religion. The quantity of bushmeat consumed was influenced by fear of contracting diseases and of eating bushmeat contaminated with poison.

Consumption was associated with perceived positive taste, nutrients and availability. Consumers ate greater quantities of bushmeat if it came from a local eatery (known as a ‘chop bar’) and if it was smoked.

Consumers were more likely to be young, except for those in the forest zone. Where livestock meat was more available and affordable, bushmeat was less likely to be eaten. In the forest and transitional zones, more educated people were less likely to eat bushmeat. But in the savannah zone higher education meant higher income and a greater likelihood of eating bushmeat, which is more expensive in this zone.

Consumers did not seem concerned about contracting diseases or consuming poison from bushmeat – except in the savannah zone.

We also discovered that religion is sometimes a factor in whether people eat bushmeat. For example, many Muslims require certain rituals to be conducted while slaughtering an animal – which isn’t usually done in bushmeat hunting. In the high forest zone, where the predominant ethnic group is Akan, some animals are culturally off limits but others can be eaten.

Unsurprisingly, chop bars emerged as the primary source of bushmeat for consumers. These local eateries are widely known for their diverse bushmeat offerings.

Consumption and conservation

The study results revealed that even though bushmeat consumption remains popular with some older people, there is an emerging market segment dominated by younger people.

With regard to forest management, the study recommends that the Wildlife Division of the Forestry Commission of Ghana enforce laws requiring only licensed chop-bar operators to sell bushmeat across the ecological zones, particularly in the transitional zone.

The public and chop-bar operators should be educated about buying wild game from licensed bushmeat hunters and sellers to prevent overharvesting.

Suppliers and producers of domesticated wild game should aim to maintain the taste of the meat while making it safe to eat. They should avoid using poison in harvesting and follow husbandry practices to reduce the likelihood of diseases that can spread from animals to people.

Marketing of domesticated wild game should target the younger group of consumers as they are less likely to be price-sensitive and more likely to buy in high quantities. A modern approach to marketing (such as digital marketing) might attract these consumers.

For conservationists and the government, religion and culture could serve to discourage the overharvesting of bushmeat from the wild.

The writer, Richard Kwasi Bannor, is a Senior Lecturer, Agribusiness, University of Energy and Natural Resource.

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