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人类从狮子( Panthera leo )身上获取肉食:干扰成本及其对食肉动物保护的影响。

Human procurement of meat from lion (Panthera leo) kills: Costs of disturbance and implications for carnivore conservation.

机构信息

Center for Tropical Research, Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.

Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2024 Aug 14;19(8):e0308068. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0308068. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

In Africa, humans and large carnivores compete over access to resources, including prey. Disturbance by humans to kills made by carnivores, often for purposes of obtaining all or portions of the carcass, constitutes a form of human-wildlife conflict. However the occurrence of this practice, known as human kleptoparasitism, and its impact on carnivores has received little scientific attention. We obtained expert opinions from African lion researchers and stakeholders via a standardized questionnaire to characterize the geographic extent and frequency of human kleptoparasitism as it occurs in modern times. Our survey found modern human kleptoparasitism on kills made by lions, and possibly other large carnivores in Africa, to be geographically more widespread than previously reported. Meat lost to humans requires carnivores to hunt and kill additional prey thereby causing stress, increasing their energetic costs and risks of natural injury, and exposing them to risk of direct injury or death from human usurpers. Because of their conspicuous behaviors and tendency towards killing large-bodied prey, lions are particularly susceptible to humans detecting their kills. While human kleptoparasitism was geographically widespread, socio-economic factors influenced the frequency of occurrence. Prey type (wild game or domestic livestock) influenced human attitudes towards meat theft; ownership allows for legal recovery of livestock carcasses, while possessing wild game meat is mostly illegal and may incur penalties. Meat theft was associated with other illegal activities (i.e., illegal mining) and most prevalent among people of low income, including underpaid game scouts. Despite quantifiable costs to carnivores of human disturbance to their kills, the majority of experts surveyed reported a lack of knowledge on this practice. We propose that human disturbance at kills, especially loss of prey through human kleptoparasitism, constitutes an important anthropogenic threat that may seriously impact energy budgets of individual lions and other scavengers when meat and carcasses are removed from the ecosystem, and that the costs incurred by carnivores warrants further investigation.

摘要

在非洲,人类和大型食肉动物争夺资源,包括猎物。人类干扰食肉动物的捕杀行为,通常是为了获取全部或部分猎物尸体,这构成了一种人与野生动物的冲突形式。然而,这种被称为人类盗食腐肉的行为的发生及其对食肉动物的影响,却很少受到科学界的关注。我们通过标准化问卷,从非洲狮研究人员和利益相关者那里获取了专家意见,以描述现代人类盗食腐肉行为的地理范围和频率。我们的调查发现,在现代,人类盗食狮子和其他可能的大型食肉动物捕杀的猎物的行为,在地理上比以前报道的更为广泛。人类盗食的肉使得食肉动物需要捕猎和杀死更多的猎物,从而给它们带来压力,增加它们的能量消耗和受伤风险,并使它们面临来自人类掠夺者的直接伤害或死亡的风险。由于狮子行为明显,倾向于捕杀大型猎物,因此特别容易被人类发现其捕杀的猎物。虽然人类盗食腐肉的行为在地理上广泛存在,但社会经济因素影响着其发生的频率。猎物类型(野生猎物或家畜)影响着人们对盗食行为的态度;拥有家畜尸体可以合法地回收,而拥有野生猎物肉则大多是非法的,并可能会受到处罚。盗食行为与其他非法活动(如非法采矿)有关,而且在低收入人群中最为普遍,包括收入微薄的狩猎监督人员。尽管人类对食肉动物捕杀行为的干扰给它们带来了可量化的成本,但接受调查的大多数专家报告称,他们对这种行为缺乏了解。我们认为,人类对捕杀行为的干扰,特别是通过人类盗食腐肉而导致猎物的损失,构成了一种重要的人为威胁,当肉和猎物尸体从生态系统中被移除时,可能会严重影响个体狮子和其他食腐动物的能量预算,而食肉动物所承担的成本值得进一步调查。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/f489/11324114/e33aac52fd53/pone.0308068.g001.jpg

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