Wildlife Conservation Society-Indonesia Program, Bogor, Indonesia.
PLoS One. 2011;6(11):e25931. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0025931. Epub 2011 Nov 2.
Large carnivores living in tropical rainforests are under immense pressure from the rapid conversion of their habitat. In response, millions of dollars are spent on conserving these species. However, the cost-effectiveness of such investments is poorly understood and this is largely because the requisite population estimates are difficult to achieve at appropriate spatial scales for these secretive species. Here, we apply a robust detection/non-detection sampling technique to produce the first reliable population metric (occupancy) for a critically endangered large carnivore; the Sumatran tiger (Panthera tigris sumatrae). From 2007-2009, seven landscapes were surveyed through 13,511 km of transects in 394 grid cells (17×17 km). Tiger sign was detected in 206 cells, producing a naive estimate of 0.52. However, after controlling for an unequal detection probability (where p = 0.13±0.017; ±S.E.), the estimated tiger occupancy was 0.72±0.048. Whilst the Sumatra-wide survey results gives cause for optimism, a significant negative correlation between occupancy and recent deforestation was found. For example, the Northern Riau landscape had an average deforestation rate of 9.8%/yr and by far the lowest occupancy (0.33±0.055). Our results highlight the key tiger areas in need of protection and have led to one area (Leuser-Ulu Masen) being upgraded as a 'global priority' for wild tiger conservation. However, Sumatra has one of the highest global deforestation rates and the two largest tiger landscapes identified in this study will become highly fragmented if their respective proposed roads networks are approved. Thus, it is vital that the Indonesian government tackles these threats, e.g. through improved land-use planning, if it is to succeed in meeting its ambitious National Tiger Recovery Plan targets of doubling the number of Sumatran tigers by 2022.
生活在热带雨林中的大型食肉动物正承受着其栖息地迅速转变带来的巨大压力。为应对这一情况,人们投入了数百万美元来保护这些物种。然而,这些投资的成本效益并不为人所知,这主要是因为对于这些隐秘物种,很难在适当的空间尺度上获得所需的种群估计。在这里,我们应用了一种强大的检测/未检测抽样技术,为一种极度濒危的大型食肉动物——苏门答腊虎( Panthera tigris sumatrae )提供了第一个可靠的种群指标(占有率)。在 2007 年至 2009 年期间,通过 394 个网格单元(17×17 公里)中的 13511 公里的样线对 7 个景观进行了调查。在 206 个单元中检测到了虎的踪迹,产生了一个天真的估计值 0.52。然而,在控制了不等的检测概率(其中 p=0.13±0.017;±S.E.)后,估计的老虎占有率为 0.72±0.048。尽管苏门答腊岛的全面调查结果令人乐观,但发现占有率与最近的森林砍伐之间存在显著的负相关。例如,北廖内景观的森林砍伐率平均为 9.8%/年,占有率最低(0.33±0.055)。我们的研究结果突出了需要保护的关键老虎区域,并导致一个区域(勒塞尔-乌鲁马森)被升级为野生老虎保护的“全球优先区域”。然而,苏门答腊岛的森林砍伐率是全球最高的,在本研究中确定的两个最大的老虎景观如果各自拟议的道路网络获得批准,将变得高度碎片化。因此,如果印度尼西亚政府要成功实现其雄心勃勃的国家老虎恢复计划目标,即将到 2022 年使苏门答腊虎的数量增加一倍,就必须应对这些威胁,例如通过改进土地利用规划。