Schüttler Elke, Saavedra-Aracena Lorena, Jiménez Jaime E
Sub-Antarctic Biocultural Conservation Program, Universidad de Magallanes, Punta Arenas, Región de Magallanes y Antártica Chilena, Chile.
Department of Biological Sciences, University of North Texas, Denton, TX, United States of America.
PeerJ. 2018 Jan 4;6:e4124. doi: 10.7717/peerj.4124. eCollection 2018.
Hundreds of millions of domestic carnivores worldwide have diverse positive affiliations with humans, but can provoke serious socio-ecological impacts when free-roaming. Unconfined dogs () and cats () interact with wildlife as predators, competitors, and disease-transmitters; their access to wildlife depends on husbandry, perceptions, attitudes, and behaviors of pet owners and non-owners.
To better understand husbandry and perceptions of impacts by unconfined, domestic carnivores, we administered questionnaires ( = 244) to pet owners and non-owners living in one of the last wilderness areas of the world, the Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve, located in southern Chile. We used descriptive statistics to provide demographic pet and husbandry information, quantify free-roaming dogs and cats, map their sightings in nature, and report experiences and perceptions of the impact of free-roaming dogs and cats on wildlife. We corroborated our results with an analysis of prey remains in dog feces ( = 53). With generalized linear models, we examined which factors (i.e., food provisioning, reproductive state, rural/village households, sex, and size) predicted that owned dogs and cats bring wildlife prey home.
Thirty-one percent of village dogs ( = 121) and 60% of dogs in rural areas ( = 47) roamed freely day and/or night. Free-roaming dog packs were frequently observed (64% of participants) in the wild, including a feral dog population on Navarino Island. Dogs (31 of 168) brought home invasive muskrats () and avian prey, and over half of all cats (27 of 51) brought home mainly avian prey. Birds were also the most harassed wildlife category, affected by one third of all dogs and cats. Nevertheless, dog-wildlife conflicts were hardly recognized (<9% of observed conflicts and suspected problems), and only 34% of the participants thought that cats might impact birds. Diet analysis revealed that dogs consumed livestock (64% of 59 prey occurrences), beavers (, 14%), and birds (10%). The probability that dogs brought prey to owners' homes was higher in rural locations and with larger dogs. There was also evidence that cats from rural households and with an inadequate food supply brought more prey home than village cats.
Although muskrat, beavers, and birds were brought home, harassed, or found in dog feces, free-roaming dogs and, to a lesser extent, cats are perceived predominantly in an anthropogenic context (i.e., as pets) and not as carnivores interacting with wildlife. Therefore, technical and legal measures should be applied to encourage neutering, increase confinement, particularly in rural areas, and stimulate social change via environmental education that draws attention to the possibility and consequences of unconfined pet interaction with wildlife in the southernmost protected forest ecoregion of the globe.
全球数亿家养食肉动物与人类有着各种各样积极的联系,但当它们自由活动时,可能会引发严重的社会生态影响。无约束的狗(犬科)和猫(猫科)作为捕食者、竞争者和疾病传播者与野生动物相互作用;它们接触野生动物的情况取决于宠物主人和非主人的饲养方式、认知、态度及行为。
为了更好地了解无约束家养食肉动物的饲养方式及其对环境影响的认知,我们对生活在世界上最后一片荒野地区之一、位于智利南部的合恩角生物圈保护区的宠物主人和非主人进行了问卷调查(n = 244)。我们使用描述性统计来提供宠物和饲养的人口统计信息,量化自由活动的狗和猫的数量,绘制它们在自然环境中的出没地点,并报告自由活动的狗和猫对野生动物影响的经历和认知。我们通过对狗粪便中的猎物残骸进行分析(n = 53)来证实我们的结果。通过广义线性模型,我们研究了哪些因素(即食物供应、生殖状态、农村/乡村家庭、性别和体型)能够预测家养狗和猫会把野生动物猎物带回家。
31%的乡村狗(n = 121)和60%的农村狗(n = 47)白天和/或晚上自由活动。在野外经常能观察到自由活动的狗群(64%的参与者),包括纳瓦里诺岛上的一群野狗。狗(168只中的31只)带回了入侵的麝鼠和鸟类猎物,超过一半的猫(51只中的27只)主要带回鸟类猎物。鸟类也是受骚扰最多的野生动物类别,所有狗和猫中有三分之一对其造成了影响。然而,狗与野生动物的冲突几乎未被认识到(观察到的冲突和疑似问题中不到9%),只有34%的参与者认为猫可能会对鸟类产生影响。饮食分析表明,狗食用家畜(59次猎物出现情况中的64%)、海狸(14%)和鸟类(10%)。农村地区以及体型较大的狗把猎物带回主人家的可能性更高。也有证据表明,来自农村家庭且食物供应不足的猫比乡村猫带回的猎物更多。
尽管在狗粪便中发现了麝鼠、海狸和鸟类,或者狗把它们带回家或对其进行了骚扰,但自由活动的狗以及在较小程度上的猫,主要是在人为环境中被视为宠物,而不是与野生动物相互作用的食肉动物。因此,应采取技术和法律措施来鼓励绝育,增加圈养,特别是在农村地区,并通过环境教育促进社会变革,使人们关注在全球最南端受保护的森林生态区无约束宠物与野生动物相互作用的可能性及其后果。