CIFOR-ICRAF publie chaque année plus de 750 publications sur l’agroforesterie, les forêts et le changement climatique, la restauration des paysages, les droits, la politique forestière et bien d’autres sujets encore, et ce dans plusieurs langues. .

CIFOR-ICRAF s’attaque aux défis et aux opportunités locales tout en apportant des solutions aux problèmes mondiaux concernant les forêts, les paysages, les populations et la planète.

Nous fournissons des preuves et des solutions concrètes pour transformer l’utilisation des terres et la production alimentaire : conserver et restaurer les écosystèmes, répondre aux crises mondiales du climat, de la malnutrition, de la biodiversité et de la désertification. En bref, nous améliorons la vie des populations.

WILDMEAT Use Database: Database user guidelines

WILDMEAT Use Database: Database user guidelines
Wild meat refers to terrestrial wildlife used for food worldwide, and despite a substantial body of site-level research on its hunting, trade, and consumption, previous studies have highlighted the need for a centralized public repository to improve evidence-based decision-making. The WILDMEAT Use Database addresses this gap by compiling published and unpublished data within a relational PostgreSQL database built on open data and FAIR principles, and structured using international metadata standards such as DDI, Dublin Core, and Darwin Core. The database accommodates three main data types—hunting, consumption, and market data—sourced from diverse formats including journal articles, raw spreadsheets, and field survey forms, and integrates both quantitative and qualitative information using standardized codes to facilitate data validation. For each study, curated flat datasets are generated in MS Excel and made accessible to registered users via the WILDMEAT Data Explorer hosted on CIFOR-Dataverse, while the underlying relational database remains non-public. Data inclusion is subject to strict criteria, requiring quantitative measurement of wild meat use, systematic sampling methods, species-level carcass identification where possible, and records of carcass counts or biomass, with additional information solicited from original authors when data are incomplete.

This work is licensed under CC-BY 4.0
Exporter la citation:
TI  - WILDMEAT Use Database: Database user guidelines 
AU  - CIFOR-ICRAF 
AB  - Wild meat refers to terrestrial wildlife used for food worldwide, and despite a substantial body of site-level research on its hunting, trade, and consumption, previous studies have highlighted the need for a centralized public repository to improve evidence-based decision-making. The WILDMEAT Use Database addresses this gap by compiling published and unpublished data within a relational PostgreSQL database built on open data and FAIR principles, and structured using international metadata standards such as DDI, Dublin Core, and Darwin Core. The database accommodates three main data types—hunting, consumption, and market data—sourced from diverse formats including journal articles, raw spreadsheets, and field survey forms, and integrates both quantitative and qualitative information using standardized codes to facilitate data validation. For each study, curated flat datasets are generated in MS Excel and made accessible to registered users via the WILDMEAT Data Explorer hosted on CIFOR-Dataverse, while the underlying relational database remains non-public. Data inclusion is subject to strict criteria, requiring quantitative measurement of wild meat use, systematic sampling methods, species-level carcass identification where possible, and records of carcass counts or biomass, with additional information solicited from original authors when data are incomplete. 
PY  - 2026 
PB  - CIFOR-ICRAF 
PP  - Bogor, Indonesia and Nairobi, Kenya 
UR  - https://www.cifor-icraf.org/knowledge/publication/46552/ 
KW  - bushmeat, data analysis, data collection, data management, databases, decision making, hunting, meat, meat consumption, trade, wildlife, wildlife conservation 
ER  -
%T WILDMEAT Use Database: Database user guidelines 
%A CIFOR-ICRAF 
%D 2026 
%I CIFOR-ICRAF 
%C Bogor, Indonesia and Nairobi, Kenya 
%U https://www.cifor-icraf.org/knowledge/publication/46552/ 
%X Wild meat refers to terrestrial wildlife used for food worldwide, and despite a substantial body of site-level research on its hunting, trade, and consumption, previous studies have highlighted the need for a centralized public repository to improve evidence-based decision-making. The WILDMEAT Use Database addresses this gap by compiling published and unpublished data within a relational PostgreSQL database built on open data and FAIR principles, and structured using international metadata standards such as DDI, Dublin Core, and Darwin Core. The database accommodates three main data types—hunting, consumption, and market data—sourced from diverse formats including journal articles, raw spreadsheets, and field survey forms, and integrates both quantitative and qualitative information using standardized codes to facilitate data validation. For each study, curated flat datasets are generated in MS Excel and made accessible to registered users via the WILDMEAT Data Explorer hosted on CIFOR-Dataverse, while the underlying relational database remains non-public. Data inclusion is subject to strict criteria, requiring quantitative measurement of wild meat use, systematic sampling methods, species-level carcass identification where possible, and records of carcass counts or biomass, with additional information solicited from original authors when data are incomplete. 
%K bushmeat 
%K data analysis 
%K data collection 
%K data management 
%K databases 
%K decision making 
%K hunting 
%K meat 
%K meat consumption 
%K trade 
%K wildlife 
%K wildlife conservation 
    Publisher

    CIFOR-ICRAF: Bogor, Indonesia and Nairobi, Kenya

    Année de publication

    2026

    Auteurs

    CIFOR-ICRAF

    Langue

    English

    Mots clés

    bushmeat, data analysis, data collection, data management, databases, decision making, hunting, meat, meat consumption, trade, wildlife, wildlife conservation