Data from: Sacred groves and serpent-gods moderate human-snake relations
1. Serpent-god worship is an ancient tradition still practiced in many sacred groves across the Western Ghats of India. Although sacred groves there hold ecological conservation value, few studies have focused on arguably the most iconic taxon in the region, snakes. 2. We thus investigated the impac...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Serpent-god worship is an ancient tradition still practiced in many
sacred groves across the Western Ghats of India. Although sacred groves
there hold ecological conservation value, few studies have focused on
arguably the most iconic taxon in the region, snakes. 2. We thus
investigated the impact of sacred groves and snake deity worshipping on
attitudes towards snakes by conducting surveys with people who had entered
such forests prior. 3. We found that next to none of the participants who
had encountered snakes inside sacred groves in the past harmed them under
such circumstances. However, nearly a quarter of all participants do harm
snakes if encountered outside sacred groves. 4. We also found that a
larger proportion of participants who do not harm snakes outside sacred
groves worship snake deities, relative to those that do harm them. 5. Our
work thus highlights the influence of sacred groves and snake deity
worshipping on pacifistic human-snake relations in Southwestern India. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.1rn8pk0pd |