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坦桑尼亚马哈雷山国家公园黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii)密度的生态关联。

Ecological correlates of chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) density in Mahale Mountains National Park, Tanzania.

机构信息

Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

School of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, United Kingdom.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2021 Feb 12;16(2):e0246628. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0246628. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

Understanding the ecological factors that drive animal density patterns in time and space is key to devising effective conservation strategies. In Tanzania, most chimpanzees (~75%) live outside national parks where human activities threaten their habitat's integrity and connectivity. Mahale Mountains National Park (MMNP), therefore, is a critical area for chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii) in the region due to its location and protective status. Yet, despite its importance and long history of chimpanzee research (>50 years), a park-wide census of the species has never been conducted. The park is categorized as a savanna-woodland mosaic, interspersed with riparian forest, wooded grassland, and bamboo thicket. This heterogeneous landscape offers an excellent opportunity to assess the ecological characteristics associated with chimpanzee density, a topic still disputed, which could improve conservation plans that protect crucial chimpanzee habitat outside the park. We examined the influence of fine-scale vegetative characteristics and topographical features on chimpanzee nest density, modeling nest counts using hierarchical distance sampling. We counted 335 nests in forest and woodland habitats across 102 transects in 13 survey sites. Nests were disproportionately found more in or near evergreen forests, on steep slopes, and in feeding tree species. We calculated chimpanzee density in MMNP to be 0.23 ind/km2, although density varied substantially among sites (0.09-3.43 ind/km2). Density was associated with factors related to the availability of food and nesting trees, with topographic heterogeneity and the total basal area of feeding tree species identified as significant positive predictors. Species-rich habitats and floristic diversity likely play a principal role in shaping chimpanzee density within a predominately open landscape with low food abundance. Our results provide valuable baseline data for future monitoring efforts in MMNP and enhance our understanding of this endangered species' density and distribution across Tanzania.

摘要

了解驱动动物密度在时间和空间上变化的生态因素是制定有效保护策略的关键。在坦桑尼亚,大多数黑猩猩(约 75%)生活在国家公园之外,那里的人类活动威胁着它们栖息地的完整性和连通性。因此,由于其位置和保护地位,马哈勒山脉国家公园(MMNP)成为该地区黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes schweinfurthii)的关键区域。尽管该公园具有重要意义,且对黑猩猩的研究已有 50 多年的历史(),但从未对该公园进行过全面的物种普查。该公园被归类为热带稀树草原-林地镶嵌体,散布着河岸林、林地草原和竹林。这种异质景观为评估与黑猩猩密度相关的生态特征提供了极好的机会,这是一个仍有争议的话题,它可以改进保护公园外关键黑猩猩栖息地的保护计划。我们研究了细微植被特征和地形特征对黑猩猩巢密度的影响,使用分层距离抽样模型对巢计数进行建模。我们在 13 个调查点的 102 个样带上统计了森林和林地栖息地的 335 个巢。结果发现,巢不成比例地更多地分布在或靠近常绿林、陡坡上,以及在觅食树种上。我们计算出 MMNP 中的黑猩猩密度为 0.23 头/km2,尽管各站点之间的密度差异很大(0.09-3.43 头/km2)。密度与与食物和筑巢树木供应相关的因素有关,地形异质性和觅食树种的总基面积被确定为重要的正预测因子。丰富的物种栖息地和植物多样性可能在塑造主要为开阔景观、食物相对匮乏的地区的黑猩猩密度方面发挥着主要作用。我们的研究结果为 MMNP 未来的监测工作提供了有价值的基线数据,并增强了我们对该濒危物种在坦桑尼亚各地密度和分布的理解。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/1aed/7880473/fb139b8ec911/pone.0246628.g001.jpg

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