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Tiger and leopard co-occurrence: intraguild interactions in response to human and livestock disturbance.

Authors :
Kafley, Hemanta
Lamichhane, Babu R.
Maharjan, Rupak
Khadka, Madhav
Bhattarai, Nishan
Gompper, Matthew E.
Source :
Basic & Applied Ecology; Nov2019, Vol. 40, p78-89, 12p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Intraguild interactions have important implications for carnivore demography and conservation. Differences in how predators respond to different forms of disturbance might alter their interaction patterns. We sought to understand how human and livestock disturbance impact co-occurrence of sympatric large carnivores such as tiger (Panthera tigris) and leopard (P. pardus) and thereby mediate the intraguild interaction pattern to enable coexistence of the species in a human-dominated landscape. We surveyed 361 locations in Chitwan National Park, Nepal, to examine how prey abundance and disturbance factors such as human and livestock presence might influence habitat use by tigers and leopards independently and when co-occurring. Single-species single-season models and two-species single-season models were developed to examine hypotheses on unconditional detection and occupancy and species interaction respectively. Pervasive human use of the park had negative impacts on tiger occupancy while the abundance of prey had a positive influence. Despite significant prey overlap between tigers and leopards, none of the native prey species predicted leopard habitat occupancy. However, habitats used extensively by livestock were also used by leopards. Further, we found strong evidence of intraguild competition. For instance tiger occupancy was higher in prey-rich areas and leopard occupancy was low in the sites where tigers were present. These findings, and a species interaction factor of < 1 clearly indicate that leopards avoid tigers, but their use of areas of disturbance enables them to persist in fringe habitats. We provide empirical evidence of how intraguild interaction may result in habitat segregation between competing carnivores, while also showing that human and livestock use of the landscape create disturbance patterns that facilitate co-occurrence of the predators. Thus, because large carnivores compete, some disturbance may mediate coexistence in small protected areas. Understanding such interactions can help address important conservation challenges associated with maintaining diverse carnivore communities in small or disturbed landscapes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14391791
Volume :
40
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Basic & Applied Ecology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
139435634
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.baae.2019.07.007