School of Natural Resources, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, NE 68583.
Center for Large Landscape Conservation, Bozeman, MT 59715.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2023 Mar 28;120(13):e2220030120. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2220030120. Epub 2023 Mar 20.
Mitigating human-caused mortality for large carnivores is a pressing global challenge for wildlife conservation. However, mortality is almost exclusively studied at local (within-population) scales creating a mismatch between our understanding of risk and the spatial extent most relevant to conservation and management of wide-ranging species. Here, we quantified mortality for 590 radio-collared mountain lions statewide across their distribution in California to identify drivers of human-caused mortality and investigate whether human-caused mortality is additive or compensatory. Human-caused mortality, primarily from conflict management and vehicles, exceeded natural mortality despite mountain lions being protected from hunting. Our data indicate that human-caused mortality is additive to natural mortality as population-level survival decreased as a function of increasing human-caused mortality and natural mortality did not decrease with increased human-caused mortality. Mortality risk increased for mountain lions closer to rural development and decreased in areas with higher proportions of citizens voting to support environmental initiatives. Thus, the presence of human infrastructure and variation in the mindset of humans sharing landscapes with mountain lions appear to be primary drivers of risk. We show that human-caused mortality can reduce population-level survival of large carnivores across large spatial scales, even when they are protected from hunting.
减轻大型食肉动物的人为死亡率是野生动物保护面临的紧迫的全球性挑战。然而,死亡率几乎完全在局部(种群内)尺度上进行研究,这导致我们对风险的理解与对广泛分布物种的保护和管理最相关的空间范围之间存在不匹配。在这里,我们对加利福尼亚州整个分布范围内 590 只佩戴无线电项圈的山狮进行了死亡统计,以确定人为死亡率的驱动因素,并调查人为死亡率是否是附加的或补偿性的。尽管山狮受到狩猎保护,但人为因素导致的死亡率(主要来自冲突管理和车辆)超过了自然死亡率。我们的数据表明,人为死亡率是附加于自然死亡率的,因为随着人为死亡率和自然死亡率的增加,种群水平的存活率下降。对于更接近农村发展的山狮来说,死亡率风险增加,而在公民投票支持环保倡议比例较高的地区,死亡率则下降。因此,人类基础设施的存在以及与山狮共享景观的人类心态的变化似乎是风险的主要驱动因素。我们表明,即使大型食肉动物受到狩猎保护,人为死亡率也可以降低其在大空间尺度上的种群水平生存能力。