Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, Department of Zoology, The Recanati-Kaplan Centre, Tubney, Abingdon, United Kingdom.
Research on the Ecology of Carnivores and Their Prey Laboratory, Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Oct 10;13(10):e0204370. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0204370. eCollection 2018.
Understanding large carnivore occurrence patterns in anthropogenic landscapes adjacent to protected areas is central to developing actions for species conservation in an increasingly human-dominated world. Among large carnivores, leopards (Panthera pardus) are the most widely distributed felid. Leopards occupying anthropogenic landscapes frequently come into conflict with humans, which often results in leopard mortality. Leopards' use of anthropogenic landscapes, and their frequent involvement with conflict, make them an insightful species for understanding the determinants of carnivore occurrence across human-dominated habitats. We evaluated the spatial variation in leopard site use across a multiple-use landscape in Tanzania's Ruaha landscape. Our study region encompassed i) Ruaha National Park, where human activities were restricted and sport hunting was prohibited; ii) the Pawaga-Idodi Wildlife Management Area, where wildlife sport hunting, wildlife poaching, and illegal pastoralism all occurred at relatively low levels; and iii) surrounding village lands where carnivores and other wildlife were frequently exposed to human-carnivore conflict related-killings and agricultural habitat conversion and development. We investigated leopard occurrence across the study region via an extensive camera trapping network. We estimated site use as a function of environmental (i.e. habitat and anthropogenic) variables using occupancy models within a Bayesian framework. We observed a steady decline in leopard site use with downgrading protected area status from the national park to the Wildlife Management Area and village lands. Our findings suggest that human-related activities such as increased livestock presence and proximity to human households exerted stronger influence than prey availability on leopard site use, and were the major limiting factors of leopard distribution across the gradient of human pressure, especially in the village lands outside Ruaha National Park. Overall, our study provides valuable information about the determinants of spatial distribution of leopards in human-dominated landscapes that can help inform conservation strategies in the borderlands adjacent to protected areas.
理解保护区周边人为景观中大猫科动物的出现模式对于在日益以人类为主导的世界中制定物种保护行动至关重要。在大猫科动物中,豹子( Panthera pardus )是分布最广的猫科动物。生活在人为景观中的豹子经常与人类发生冲突,这常常导致豹子死亡。豹子对人为景观的利用以及它们经常与冲突有关,使它们成为了解在以人类为主导的栖息地中大猫科动物出现的决定因素的有见地的物种。我们评估了坦桑尼亚鲁阿哈景观中一个多用途景观中豹子栖息地利用的空间变化。我们的研究区域包括:i)鲁阿哈国家公园,人类活动受到限制,禁止运动狩猎;ii) Pawaga-Idodi 野生动物管理区,野生动物运动狩猎、野生动物偷猎和非法畜牧业都相对较少;iii)周边村庄土地,那里的食肉动物和其他野生动物经常遭受与人类-食肉动物冲突相关的杀戮以及农业栖息地的转换和开发。我们通过广泛的相机陷阱网络调查了研究区域内豹子的出现情况。我们使用贝叶斯框架内的占有模型来估计环境(即栖息地和人为)变量对栖息地利用的影响。我们观察到,随着保护区地位从国家公园降级到野生动物管理区和村庄土地,豹子栖息地利用的稳定下降。我们的研究结果表明,与人类相关的活动,如牲畜数量的增加和靠近人类家庭,对豹子栖息地利用的影响比猎物的可获得性更大,是豹子在人类压力梯度中分布的主要限制因素,特别是在鲁阿哈国家公园以外的村庄土地。总的来说,我们的研究提供了有关在以人类为主导的景观中豹子空间分布决定因素的宝贵信息,可以为保护区周边边境地区的保护策略提供信息。