Tédonzong Luc Roscelin Dongmo, Willie Jacob, Makengveu Sandra Tewamba, Lens Luc, Tagg Nikki
Projet Grands Singes (PGS), Cameroon Centre for Research and Conservation (CRC) Royal Zoological Society of Antwerp (RZSA) Antwerpen Belgium.
Terrestrial Ecology Unit (TEREC) Department of Biology Ghent University (UGent) Ghent Belgium.
Ecol Evol. 2020 Mar 11;10(8):3798-3813. doi: 10.1002/ece3.6178. eCollection 2020 Apr.
Human activities can lead to a shift in wildlife species' spatial distribution. Understanding the specific effects of human activities on ranging behavior can improve conservation management of wildlife populations in human-dominated landscapes. This study evaluated the effects of forest use by humans on the spatial distribution of mammal species with different behavioral adaptations, using sympatric western lowland gorilla and central chimpanzee as focal species. We collected data on great ape nest locations, ecological and physical variables (habitat distribution, permanent rivers, and topographic data), and anthropogenic variables (distance to trails, villages, and a permanent research site). Here, we show that anthropogenic variables are important predictors of the distribution of wild animals. In the resource model, the distribution of gorilla nests was predicted by nesting habitat distribution, while chimpanzee nests were predicted first by elevation followed by nesting habitat distribution. In the anthropogenic model, the major predictors of gorilla nesting changed to human features, while the major predictors of chimpanzee nesting remained elevation and the availability of their preferred nesting habitats. Animal behavioral traits (body size, terrestrial/arboreal, level of specialization/generalization, and competitive inferiority/superiority) may influence the response of mammals to human activities. Our results suggest that chimpanzees may survive in human-encroached areas whenever the availability of their nesting habitat and preferred fruits can support their population, while a certain level of human activities may threaten gorillas. Consequently, the survival of gorillas in human-dominated landscapes is more at risk than that of chimpanzees. Replicating our research in other sites should permit a systematic evaluation of the influence of human activity on the distribution of mammal populations. As wild animals are increasingly exposed to human disturbance, understanding the resulting consequences of shifting species distributions due to human disturbance on animal population abundance and their long-term survival will be of growing conservation importance.
人类活动会导致野生动物物种空间分布的改变。了解人类活动对其活动范围行为的具体影响,有助于改善人类主导景观中野生动物种群的保护管理。本研究以同域分布的西部低地大猩猩和黑猩猩为重点物种,评估了人类森林利用活动对具有不同行为适应性的哺乳动物物种空间分布的影响。我们收集了有关类人猿巢穴位置、生态和物理变量(栖息地分布、永久性河流和地形数据)以及人为变量(与步道、村庄和永久性研究地点的距离)的数据。在此,我们表明人为变量是野生动物分布的重要预测因子。在资源模型中,大猩猩巢穴的分布由筑巢栖息地分布预测,而黑猩猩巢穴首先由海拔高度预测,其次是筑巢栖息地分布。在人为模型中,大猩猩筑巢的主要预测因子变为人类特征,而黑猩猩筑巢的主要预测因子仍然是海拔高度及其首选筑巢栖息地的可用性。动物行为特征(体型大小、陆生/树栖、特化/泛化程度以及竞争劣势/优势)可能会影响哺乳动物对人类活动的反应。我们的研究结果表明,只要黑猩猩的筑巢栖息地和喜爱的果实能够维持其种群数量,它们就可能在人类侵扰的地区生存,而一定程度的人类活动可能会威胁到大猩猩。因此,在人类主导的景观中,大猩猩的生存比黑猩猩面临更大的风险。在其他地点重复我们的研究,应能对人类活动对哺乳动物种群分布的影响进行系统评估。随着野生动物越来越多地受到人类干扰,了解由于人类干扰导致的物种分布变化对动物种群数量及其长期生存所产生的后果,在保护方面将变得越来越重要。