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Men and wolves: Anthropogenic causes are an important driver of wolf mortality in human-dominated landscapes in Italy

Authors :
L. Fiorentini
Romolo Caniglia
Paolo Bonilauri
C. Garbarino
Carmela Musto
Giulia Maioli
Alice Prosperi
Marco Galaverni
Mauro Delogu
Duccio Berzi
Elena Fabbri
Nadia Mucci
Arianna Rossi
Maria Cristina Fontana
Jacopo Cerri
L. Gelmini
Giuseppe Merialdi
Francesca Ciuti
Marco Apollonio
Musto, Carmela
Cerri, Jacopo
Galaverni, Marco
Caniglia, Romolo
Fabbri, Elena
Apollonio, Marco
Mucci, Nadia
Bonilauri, Paolo
Maioli, Giulia
Fontana, Maria C.
Gelmini, Luca
Prosperi, Alice
Rossi, Arianna
Garbarino, Chiara
Fiorentini, Laura
Ciuti, Francesca
Berzi, Duccio
Merialdi, Giuseppe
Delogu, Mauro
Source :
Global Ecology and Conservation, Vol 32, Iss, Pp e01892-(2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Over the last 40 years the gray wolf (Canis lupus) re-colonized its historical range in Italy increasing human-predator interactions. However, temporal and spatial trends in wolf mortality, including direct and indirect persecution, were never summarized. This study aims to fill this gap by focusing on the situation of Tuscany and Emilia-Romagna regions, hosting a significant proportion of the Italian wolf population, by: (i) identifying the prevalent causes of wolf mortality, (ii) summarizing their temporal and spatial patterns and (iii) applying spatially-explicit Generalized Linear Models to predict wolf persecution. Between October 2005 and February 2021, 212 wolf carcasses were collected and subjected to necropsy, being involved in collisions with vehicles (n = 104), poisoned (n = 45), wounded with gunshot (n = 24) or blunt objects (n = 4) and being hanged (n = 2). The proportion of illegally killed wolves did not increase through time. Most persecution events occurred between October and February. None of our candidate models outperformed a null model and covariates such as the density of sheep farms, number of predations on livestock, or human density were never associated to the probability of having illegally killed wolves, at the municipal scale. Our findings show that conventional correlates of wolf persecution, combined with a supposedly high proportion of non-retrieved carcasses, fail to predict illegal wolf killings in areas where the species have become ubiquitous. The widespread spatial distribution of illegal killings indicates that persecution probably arises from multiple kinds of conflicts with humans, beyond those with husbandry. Wolf conservation in Italy should thus address cryptic wolf killings with multi-disciplinary approaches, such as shared national protocols, socio-ecological studies, the support of experts’ experience and effective sampling schemes for the detection of carcasses.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Global Ecology and Conservation, Vol 32, Iss, Pp e01892-(2021)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e0bd650921a693d4bb923146abb776c2