Ophidiophobia, myth generation, and human perceptions: Implications for snake conservation in a typical savanna community of northern Ghana

Yahaya Musah, Daniel K. Attuquayefio, Abigail N.A. Pobee, Lars H. Holbech

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Snakes have fascinated and terrified humans throughout history. Worldwide, innate fear (ophidiophobia), culturally-founded superstition, and myths have caused pervasive snake persecution, snakebite mismanagement, human injuries, and fatalities, particularly in the tropics. We analyzed 20 common snake myths narrated by 934 respondents inhabiting a typical rural savanna community of northern Ghana. The myths summarized perceived, self-assessed knowledge about snakes and were evaluated in their zoo-ecological contexts versus their folkloristic explanatory origins. Only eight snake myths (~40%) had any justifiable scientific basis, partially representing misinterpretations among predominantly male, less-educated respondents. Contrastingly, 70% of the myths were largely rooted in ophidiophobia, representing a major driver of human-wildlife conflict and indiscriminate snake persecution. To promote wildlife-friendly perceptions and behavior toward snakes and their conservation, we recommend innovative gap-bridging conservation education and public awareness that reconciles myths and realities about snakes, thus reducing snakebite incidences, mortality, and widespread persecution and killing of snakes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)321-342
Number of pages22
JournalHuman Dimensions of Wildlife
Volume27
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Keywords

  • Beliefs
  • folklore
  • psychology
  • self-assessed knowledge
  • snake fear
  • West Africa
  • zoo-ecology

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