Department of Human Behavior, Ecology and Culture, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
Department of Anthropology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 May 14;16(5):e0251076. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0251076. eCollection 2021.
In many regions of sub Saharan Africa large mammals occur in human-dominated areas, yet their community composition and abundance have rarely been described in areas occupied by traditional hunter-gatherers and pastoralists. Surveys of mammal populations in such areas provide important measures of biodiversity and provide ecological context for understanding hunting practices. Using a sampling grid centered on a Hadza hunter-gatherer camp and covering 36 km2 of semi-arid savannah in northern Tanzania, we assessed mammals using camera traps (n = 19 stations) for c. 5 months (2,182 trap nights). In the study area (Tli'ika in the Hadza language), we recorded 36 wild mammal species. Rarefaction curves suggest that sampling effort was sufficient to capture mammal species richness, yet some species known to occur at low densities in the wider area (e.g. African lions, wildebeest) were not detected. Relative abundance indices of wildlife species varied by c. three orders of magnitude, from a mean of 0.04 (African wild dog) to 20.34 capture events per 100 trap-nights (Kirk's dik dik). To contextualize the relative abundance of wildlife in the study area, we compared our study's data to comparable camera trap data collected in a fully protected area of northern Tanzania with similar rainfall (Lake Manyara National Park). Raw data and negative binomial regression analyses show that wild herbivores and wild carnivores were generally detected in the national park at higher rates than in the Hadza-occupied region. Livestock were notably absent from the national park, but were detected at high levels in Tli'ika, and cattle was the second most frequently detected species in the Hadza-used area. We discuss how these data inform current conservation efforts, studies of Hadza hunting, and models of hunter-gatherer foraging ecology and diet.
在撒哈拉以南非洲的许多地区,大型哺乳动物生活在人类主导的区域,但在传统的狩猎采集者和牧民居住的地区,它们的群落组成和数量却很少被描述。在这些地区对哺乳动物种群进行调查,可以提供生物多样性的重要衡量标准,并为了解狩猎实践提供生态背景。我们使用以 Hadza 狩猎采集者营地为中心的采样网格,对坦桑尼亚北部半干旱稀树草原的 36 平方公里区域进行了哺乳动物调查,使用相机陷阱(n = 19 个站)进行了大约 5 个月(2182 个陷阱夜)的监测。在研究区域(Hadza 语中的 Tli'ika),我们记录了 36 种野生哺乳动物。稀有曲线表明,采样工作足以捕获哺乳动物物种丰富度,但在更广泛的区域中密度较低的一些物种(例如非洲狮、角马)未被检测到。野生动物物种的相对丰度指数变化幅度约为三个数量级,从平均每 100 个陷阱夜 0.04 次(非洲野犬)到 20.34 次(柯氏长角羚)。为了使研究区域内野生动物的相对丰度具有背景意义,我们将本研究的数据与在坦桑尼亚北部具有相似降雨量的完全保护区(马尼亚拉湖国家公园)中收集的可比相机陷阱数据进行了比较。原始数据和负二项式回归分析表明,野生食草动物和野生食肉动物在国家公园中的检测率通常高于 Hadza 居住地区。家畜在国家公园中明显不存在,但在 Tli'ika 中检测到很高的水平,而牛是在 Hadza 使用区域中第二常见的检测物种。我们讨论了这些数据如何为当前的保护工作、对 Hadza 狩猎的研究以及狩猎采集者觅食生态和饮食模型提供信息。