Sharma Koustubh, Bayrakcismith Rana, Tumursukh Lkhagvasumberel, Johansson Orjan, Sevger Purevsuren, McCarthy Tom, Mishra Charudutt
Snow Leopard Trust, Seattle, Washington, United States of America; Nature Conservation Foundation, Mysore, Karnataka, India.
Panthera, New York, New York, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Jul 9;9(7):e101319. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0101319. eCollection 2014.
Population monitoring programmes and estimation of vital rates are key to understanding the mechanisms of population growth, decline or stability, and are important for effective conservation action. We report, for the first time, the population trends and vital rates of the endangered snow leopard based on camera trapping over four years in the Tost Mountains, South Gobi, Mongolia. We used robust design multi-season mark-recapture analysis to estimate the trends in abundance, sex ratio, survival probability and the probability of temporary emigration and immigration for adult and young snow leopards. The snow leopard population remained constant over most of the study period, with no apparent growth (λ = 1.08+-0.25). Comparison of model results with the "known population" of radio-collared snow leopards suggested high accuracy in our estimates. Although seemingly stable, vigorous underlying dynamics were evident in this population, with the adult sex ratio shifting from being male-biased to female-biased (1.67 to 0.38 males per female) during the study. Adult survival probability was 0.82 (SE+-0.08) and that of young was 0.83 (SE+-0.15) and 0.77 (SE +-0.2) respectively, before and after the age of 2 years. Young snow leopards showed a high probability of temporary emigration and immigration (0.6, SE +-0.19 and 0.68, SE +-0.32 before and after the age of 2 years) though not the adults (0.02 SE+-0.07). While the current female-bias in the population and the number of cubs born each year seemingly render the study population safe, the vigorous dynamics suggests that the situation can change quickly. The reduction in the proportion of male snow leopards may be indicative of continuing anthropogenic pressures. Our work reiterates the importance of monitoring both the abundance and population dynamics of species for effective conservation.
种群监测计划和生命率估计是理解种群增长、下降或稳定机制的关键,对于有效的保护行动也很重要。我们首次报告了基于蒙古南戈壁托斯特山脉四年相机陷阱监测数据的濒危雪豹种群趋势和生命率。我们使用稳健设计多季节标记重捕分析来估计成年和幼年雪豹的数量趋势、性别比例、生存概率以及临时迁出和迁入概率。在研究的大部分时间里,雪豹种群数量保持稳定,没有明显增长(λ = 1.08±0.25)。将模型结果与无线电项圈标记的雪豹“已知种群”进行比较,表明我们的估计具有很高的准确性。尽管该种群看似稳定,但潜在的活跃动态明显,在研究期间成年性别比例从雄性偏多转变为雌性偏多(每只雌性有1.67只雄性到0.38只雄性)。成年雪豹的生存概率为0.82(标准误±0.08),幼年雪豹在2岁前后的生存概率分别为0.83(标准误±0.15)和0.77(标准误±0.2)。幼年雪豹表现出较高的临时迁出和迁入概率(2岁前后分别为0.6,标准误±0.19和0.68,标准误±0.32),而成年雪豹则较低(0.02,标准误±0.07)。虽然目前种群中雌性偏多以及每年出生的幼崽数量似乎使研究种群处于安全状态,但活跃的动态表明情况可能迅速改变。雄性雪豹比例的下降可能表明持续存在人为压力。我们的工作重申了监测物种数量和种群动态对于有效保护的重要性。