Mengüllüoğlu Deniz, İlaslan Eylül, Emir Hasan, Berger Anne
Department of Evolutionary Ecology, Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (IZW Berlin), Berlin, Germany.
Department of Biology, Chemistry and Pharmacy, Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
PeerJ. 2019 Aug 21;7:e7446. doi: 10.7717/peerj.7446. eCollection 2019.
The gray wolf () is making a comeback in many habitats in central Europe, where it has been once extirpated. Although densities are still low to moderate, this comeback already raises management concerns. In Anatolia, the gray wolf is one of the most common predator species occupying almost all kind of habitats. Although its numbers were reduced in some parts of the country, it has never been extirpated and lived in sympatry with humans. In this study we investigated, for the first time, the winter diet of wolves in north-west Anatolia, where a multispecies wild ungulate community occurs in sympatry with high density livestock. We selected two geographically close but different habitats (steppe and forest) with different wild prey availabilities and compositions. In both areas ungulate contribution to winter diet biomass was more than 90%. Wolf pack size (four to eight wolves) were higher in the study area where livestock numbers and human disturbance were lower and wild prey were more available. In both study areas, wild boar () was the main and most preferred food item (Chesson's α = 0.7 - 0.9) and it occurred at higher density where wolf pack size was smaller. We could not find a high preference (Chesson's α = 0.3) and high winter predation pressure on the reintroduced Anatolian wild sheep () population that occurs in the study area covered by steppe vegetation. Contribution of livestock and food categories other than wild ungulates to wolf diet stayed low. Wolves can help mitigate human-wildlife conflict regulating wild boar numbers, the most common conflict-causing ungulate species in Anatolia. Instead of managing wolf numbers in human dominated landscapes, we recommend reintroduction of wild ungulates to the areas where they became locally extinct and replaced by livestock.
灰狼()正在中欧的许多曾被灭绝的栖息地重新出现。尽管其密度仍然较低至中等,但这种重新出现已经引发了管理方面的担忧。在安纳托利亚,灰狼是占据几乎所有栖息地类型的最常见捕食者物种之一。尽管其数量在该国某些地区有所减少,但它从未被灭绝,而是与人类共存。在本研究中,我们首次调查了安纳托利亚西北部狼的冬季饮食,该地区有一个多物种野生有蹄类动物群落与高密度牲畜共存。我们选择了两个地理位置相近但不同的栖息地(草原和森林),它们具有不同的野生猎物可利用性和组成。在这两个地区,有蹄类动物对冬季饮食生物量的贡献都超过了90%。在牲畜数量和人类干扰较低且野生猎物更多的研究区域,狼群规模(四至八只狼)更大。在两个研究区域,野猪()都是主要且最受青睐的食物项目(切森氏α = 0.7 - 0.9),并且在狼群规模较小的地方其密度更高。我们在草原植被覆盖的研究区域内重新引入的安纳托利亚野生绵羊()种群上,没有发现高偏好(切森氏α = 0.3)和高冬季捕食压力。牲畜以及除野生有蹄类动物之外的食物类别对狼饮食的贡献仍然很低。狼可以通过调节野猪数量来帮助减轻人类与野生动物的冲突,野猪是安纳托利亚最常见的导致冲突的有蹄类物种。我们建议,与其在人类主导的景观中管理狼的数量,不如将野生有蹄类动物重新引入它们在当地灭绝并被牲畜取代的地区。