Kurz David J, Connor Thomas, Brodie Jedediah F, Baking Esther L, Szeto Sabrina H, Hearn Andrew J, Gardner Penny C, Wearn Oliver R, Deith Mairin C M, Deere Nicolas J, Ampeng Ahmad, Bernard Henry, Goon Jocelyn, Granados Alys, Helmy Olga, Lim Hong-Ye, Luskin Matthew Scott, Macdonald David W, Ross Joanna, Simpson Boyd K, Struebig Matthew J, Mohd-Azlan Jayasilan, Potts Matthew D, Goossens Benoit, Brashares Justin S
Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, 94720, USA.
Environmental Science Program, Trinity College, Hartford, CT, 06106, USA.
NPJ Biodivers. 2023 Feb 17;2(1):4. doi: 10.1038/s44185-022-00008-w.
Biophysical and socio-cultural factors have jointly shaped the distribution of global biodiversity, yet relatively few studies have quantitatively assessed the influence of social and ecological landscapes on wildlife distributions. We sought to determine whether social and ecological covariates shape the distribution of a cultural keystone species, the bearded pig (Sus barbatus). Drawing on a dataset of 295 total camera trap locations and 25,755 trap days across 18 field sites and three years in Sabah and Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo, we fitted occupancy models that incorporated socio-cultural covariates and ecological covariates hypothesized to influence bearded pig occupancy. We found that all competitive occupancy models included both socio-cultural and ecological covariates. Moreover, we found quantitative evidence supporting Indigenous pig hunting rights: predicted pig occupancy was positively associated with predicted high levels of Indigenous pig-hunting groups in low-accessibility areas, and predicted pig occupancy was positively associated with predicted medium and low levels of Indigenous pig-hunting groups in high-accessibility areas. These results suggest that bearded pig populations in Malaysian Borneo should be managed with context-specific strategies, promoting Indigenous pig hunting rights. We also provide important baseline information on bearded pig occupancy levels prior to the 2020-2021 outbreak of African Swine Fever (ASF), which caused social and ecological concerns after mass dieoffs of bearded pigs in Borneo. The abstract provided in Malay is in the Supplementary file.
生物物理和社会文化因素共同塑造了全球生物多样性的分布,但相对较少的研究定量评估了社会和生态景观对野生动物分布的影响。我们试图确定社会和生态协变量是否塑造了一种文化关键物种——婆罗洲须猪(Sus barbatus)的分布。利用马来西亚婆罗洲沙巴和砂拉越18个野外地点、为期三年的295个相机陷阱位置和25755个陷阱日的数据集,我们拟合了包含社会文化协变量和生态协变量的占用模型,这些协变量被假设会影响婆罗洲须猪的占用情况。我们发现,所有具有竞争力的占用模型都包括社会文化和生态协变量。此外,我们发现了支持原住民猎猪权利的定量证据:在可达性低的地区,预测的猪的占用情况与预测的高水平原住民猎猪群体呈正相关;在可达性高的地区,预测的猪的占用情况与预测的中低水平原住民猎猪群体呈正相关。这些结果表明,马来西亚婆罗洲的婆罗洲须猪种群应以因地制宜策略进行管理,促进原住民猎猪权利。我们还提供了2020 - 2021年非洲猪瘟(ASF)爆发前婆罗洲须猪占用水平的重要基线信息,非洲猪瘟在婆罗洲须猪大量死亡后引发了社会和生态问题。马来语摘要见补充文件。