Chege Mumbi, Bertola Laura D, De Snoo Geert R, Ngene Shadrack, Otieno Tobias, Amoke Irene, van 't Zelfde Maarten, Dolrenry Stephanie, Broekhuis Femke, Tamis Will, De Iongh Hans H, Elliot Nicholas B
Wildlife Research and Training Institute Naivasha Kenya.
Institute of Environmental Sciences CML Leiden University Leiden The Netherlands.
Ecol Evol. 2024 Feb 14;14(2):e10982. doi: 10.1002/ece3.10982. eCollection 2024 Feb.
Social carnivores frequently live in fission-fusion societies, where individuals that share a common territory or home range may be found alone, in subgroups, or altogether. Absolute group size and subgroup size is expected to vary according to resource distribution, but for species that are susceptible to anthropogenic pressures, other factors may be important drivers. African lions () are the only truly social felid and lion prides are characterized by fission-fusion dynamics with social groups frequently splitting and reforming, and subgroup membership can change continuously and frequently. The number of individuals in a group can be reflective of social, ecological, and anthropogenic conditions. This dynamic behavior makes understanding lion grouping patterns crucial for tailoring conservation measures. The evolution of group living in lions has been the topic of numerous studies, and we drew on these to formulate hypotheses relating to group size and subgroup size variation. Based on data collected from 199 lion groups across eight sites in Kenya, we found that group sizes were smaller when lions were closer to human settlements, suggesting that edge effects are impacting lions at a national scale. Smaller groups were also more likely when they were far from water, and were associated with very low and very high levels of non-tree vegetation. We found significant differences between the study sites, with the Maasai Mara having the largest groups (mean ± SD = 7.7 ± 4.7, range = 1-19), and Amboseli conservation area the smallest (4.3 ± 3.5, range = 1-14). While long-term studies within a single site are well suited to thoroughly differentiate between absolute group size and subgroup size, our study provides unique insight into the correlates of grouping patterns in a vulnerable species at a national scale.
群居食肉动物常常生活在裂变融合社会中,在这样的社会里,共享同一领地或家园范围的个体可能独自行动、结成小群体,或者全部聚集在一起。绝对群体规模和亚群体规模预计会根据资源分布而变化,但对于易受人为压力影响的物种而言,其他因素可能是重要的驱动因素。非洲狮()是唯一真正具有社会性的猫科动物,狮群的特点是具有裂变融合动态,社会群体经常分裂和重组,亚群体成员资格会持续且频繁地发生变化。群体中的个体数量能够反映社会、生态和人为状况。这种动态行为使得了解狮子的群体形成模式对于制定保护措施至关重要。狮子群体生活的演化一直是众多研究的主题,我们借鉴这些研究来提出与群体规模和亚群体规模变化相关的假设。基于从肯尼亚八个地点的199个狮子群体收集的数据,我们发现当狮子靠近人类住区时,群体规模较小,这表明边缘效应在国家层面上对狮子产生了影响。当狮子远离水源时,较小群体出现的可能性也更大,并且与极低和极高水平的非树木植被有关。我们发现各研究地点之间存在显著差异,马赛马拉的群体规模最大(平均值±标准差 = 7.7 ± 4.7,范围 = 1 - 19),而安博塞利保护区的群体规模最小(4.3 ± 3.5,范围 = 1 - 14)。虽然在单个地点进行的长期研究非常适合彻底区分绝对群体规模和亚群体规模,但我们的研究为在国家层面上了解一个易危物种的群体形成模式的相关因素提供了独特的见解。