February 1, 2026
Alireza Mohammadi

Alireza Mohammadi

Academic rank: Assistant professor
Address: Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, Faculty of Natural Resources, University of Jiroft, Jiroft, Iran
Education: PhD. in Wildlife Ecology and Management
Phone:
Faculty:

Research

Title
Socio-psychological determinants of beekeeper conflict with bee-eaters
Type Article
Keywords
apiculture, coexistence, conservation conflict, human–wildlife conflict, lethal removal, Merops apiaster, Merops orientalis, Merops persicus, theory of planned behavior
Researchers Danial Nayeri, Logan Hysen, Daniel Pilgreen, Reyhane Rastgoo, Pourya Sardari, Alireza Mohammadi, Seyed Mohammadreza Kashfi, Ashley Dayer, Gerard Kyle

Abstract

Mitigating conservation conflict is challenging for wildlife managers, particularly with a growing human population. Past work investigating coexistence with wildlife has prioritized megafauna, overlooking many smaller species that cause substantial damage, yet also play important ecological roles. Our study addresses this gap by examining conflict between three native bee-eater bird species and beekeepers in Iran through a web-based survey distributed across beekeeper social media networks. Using the theory of planned behavior to conceptually guide our study, we sought to understand beekeepers' use of lethal control methods to address conflict with bee-eater species. Our binomial generalized linear model revealed that years of beekeeping experience (odds ratio [OR] = 1.48), subjective norms (OR = 0.58), behavioral intention (OR = 0.75), and taking beekeeping courses (OR = 0.52) were significant predictors of beekeepers' use of lethal control methods. We also found that compared to those with no economic dependence on beekeeping, individuals with very low (OR = 0.28) and low (OR = 0.34) dependence on beekeeping were less likely to report using lethal control methods. Our findings indicated more experienced beekeepers were more likely to kill bee-eaters. Beekeepers who reported stronger subjective norms around not killing bee-eaters were significantly less likely to implement lethal control and those who expressed an intention to .Our findings suggest a need for bettertraining of less experienced beekeepers to promote non-lethal control methods effective at preventing bee depredation and support in provisioning beeeater-resistant supplies for them. Parallel community engagement initiatives aimed at shifting subjective norms toward coexistence with wildlife would also lessen bee-eater mortality. Our findings illustrate that conflict with smaller species can be polarizing as megafauna, especially when livelihoods are perceived or actually threatened by such species.shoot bee-eaters if they approached beehives were more likely to have previously used lethal control methods.