| Literature DB >> 22347469 |
Raymond Alfred1, Abd Hamid Ahmad, Junaidi Payne, Christy Williams, Laurentius Nayan Ambu, Phua Mui How, Benoit Goossens.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Home range is defined as the extent and location of the area covered annually by a wild animal in its natural habitat. Studies of African and Indian elephants in landscapes of largely open habitats have indicated that the sizes of the home range are determined not only by the food supplies and seasonal changes, but also by numerous other factors including availability of water sources, habitat loss and the existence of man-made barriers. The home range size for the Bornean elephant had never been investigated before. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22347469 PMCID: PMC3275559 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0031400
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Estimated home ranging for Asian elephant based on previous studies in Asia and using Minimum Convex Polygon (MCP).
| Source | Size of home range | Method | Tracking Method | Remarks |
| Khan | 166.6 km2 | MCP | Visual Observation and radio tracking | A group of adults in Peninsular Malaysia |
| Khan | 84.3 km2 | MCP | Visual Observation and radio tracking | Sub-unit that comprises young elephants in Peninsular Malaysia |
| Khan | 313 km2 | MCP | Visual Observation and Foot tracking | In Peninsular Malaysia |
| Olivier | 167 km2 | MCP | Radio tracking | In primary forest in Peninsular Malaysia |
| Olivier | 59 km2 | MCP | Radio tracking | In secondary forest Peninsular Malaysia |
| Sukumar | 105 km2 to 115 km2 | MCP | Radio and GPS tracking | In India |
| Sukumar | 170 km2 to 320 km2 | MCP | Radio and GPS tracking | In India |
Summary of elephant collaring and locations.
| No | Location name | Existing forest type(s) | Successful collarings (date) | Name given to elephant's herd | Age/Sex |
| 1 | Batu Timbang | DF/HF | - | - | |
| 2 | Kalabakan | DF | 13 June 2005 | Rozelis | Large immature female |
| 3 | Taliwas | DF | 22 June 2005 | Tailiwas | Adult female |
| 4 | Ulu Segama Malua | DF/UF | 23 June 2005 | Nancy | Adult female |
| 5 | Lower Kina-batangan | DF/FSF/MF | 7 July 2005 | Bod Tai | Large immature |
| 6 | Gunung Rara | DF | 17 July 2005 | Penelope | Adult female |
| 7 | Deramakot | DF | - | - | - |
DF for Dipterocarp Forest, HF for Heath Forest, UF for Ultramafic Forest, FSF for Freshwater Swamp Forest, MF for Mangrove Forest.
Figure 1Location of the successful capturing and collaring of the elephants, Sabah Malaysia.
Summary of tracking periods and tracking performances using satellite GPS collar for each elephant herd.
| Name of herd | Estima-ted herd size | Date of collaring | Tracking record dates | Overall duration of tracking | Number of GPS location obtained | No of days with GPS location obtained | % of tracking (Daily tracking) |
| Rozelis | 12 | 13 June 2005 | 13 June–4 July 2005 | 21 days | 16 | 12 days | 57.1% |
| Tailiwas | 45 | 22 June 2005 | 22 June 2005–14 January 2006 | 216 days | 58 | 49 days | 22.7% |
| Nancy | 23 | 23 June 2005 | 23 June 2005–21 June 2006 | 364 days | 165 | 123 days | 33.8% |
| Bod Tai | 65 | 7 July 2005 | 7 July 2005–7 July 2006 | 366 days | 277 | 169 days | 46.2% |
| Penelope | 43 | 17 July 2005 | 17 July–4 November 2005 | 110 days | 32 | 29 days | 26.4% |
Figure 2Home range pattern generated by the elephant herds based on MCP method.
Figure 3Home range pattern generated by the elephant herds, based on HM methods.
Home range of each elephant based on Minimum Convex Polygon (MCP) and Harmonic Mean (HM) home range estimation methods, and average monthly ranging generated using MCP and HM.
| Elephant Herds | Rozelis | Tailiwas | Nancy | Bod Tai | Penelope |
| Tracking Period (days) | 21 | 216 | 364 | 366 | 110 |
| Home Range (km2) using MCP | 11.90 | 316.20 | 291.54 | 778.62 | 248.88 |
| Core Area 1 (km2) using HM with 65% isopleths | 7.06 | 118.00 | 80.49 | 112.11 | 113.77 |
| Core Area 2 (km2) using HM with 75% isopleths | 10.44 | 155.48 | 113.38 | 141.44 | 171.78 |
| Core Area 3 (km2) using HM with 85% isopleths | 15.55 | 205.07 | 152.99 | 256.46 | 252.67 |
| Average Monthly Ranging (MCP) | 50.25 | 50.12 | 120.86 | 59.48 | |
| SD for Monthly Ranging (MCP) | 31.17 | 21.63 | 147.56 | 14.74 | |
| SE for Monthly Ranging (MCP) | 13.93 | 6.52 | 42.60 | 8.51 | |
| Average Monthly Ranging (HM) | 103.77 | 110.27 | 277.56 | 191.25 | |
| SD for Monthly Ranging (HM) | 27.25 | 35.49 | 426.27 | 118.33 | |
| SE for Monthly Ranging (HM) | 13.63 | 10.70 | 123.05 | 68.32 |
Figure 4Monthly ranging for BodTai's herd in fragmented forest (using Harmonic Mean 95% isopleths).
Figure 5Monthly ranging for Nancy's herd in fragmented forest (using Harmonic Mean 95% isopleths).
Mean daily rate of elephant herds' movements.
| Name of elephant herd | Number of days with consecutive GPS locations | Distance (Km) | Mean rate of movement (Km/day) | Standard deviation (SD) | Standard error (SE) | % CV |
| Rozelis | 5 | 5.49 | 1.10 | 1.06 | 0.47 | 43% |
| Tailiwas | 19 | 23.81 | 1.25 | 1.04 | 0.24 | 19% |
| Nancy | 22 | 27.93 | 1.27 | 0.95 | 0.20 | 16% |
| Bod Tai | 111 | 200.49 | 1.81 | 1.92 | 0.18 | 10% |
| Penelope | 8 | 12.07 | 1.51 | 0.82 | 0.29 | 19% |
Figure 6Percentage of the elephant herd's movement per day.
Figure 7Percentage of areas with different forest types, utilised by the monitored elephants.
Figure 8Estimated percentage of areas with different altitude classes, utilised by the monitored elephants.
Description of the habitat found in each capture location.
| Habitat Description | Name of elephant herd |
| Industrial timber plantation and heavily logged dipterocarp forest combined with one patch of undisturbed dipterocarp forest. | Rozelis |
| Regenerating logged dipterocarp forest with patches of primary dipterocarp and ultramafic forest | Tailiwas |
| Regenerating logged dipterocarp forest with patches of primary dipterocarp and ultramafic forest | Nancy |
| Degraded dryland and freshwater swamp forests, scrub, riverside forest and mangrove, oil palm plantation, villages | Bod Tai |
| Logged dipterocarp and heath forest and primary upland dipterocarp forest (Logging activities were active in this area during the tracking period) | Penelope |
Description of the forest types.
| Forest Type | Description |
| Heath Forest (HF) | The tree canopy averages between 5 and 30 meters tall, but is fairly homogeneous in a particular area. There are few big lianas, but many slender ones. Trees of the family Myrtaceae usually predominate. |
| Ultramafic Forest (UF) | UF varies greatly in structure and species composition, but is usually dominated by species rare or absent from other nearby forests. On hill slopes, UF tends to have a very even rather low canopy in comparison with DF. The only common factor in all UF is that it develops on soils derived from ultramafic rock. |
| Dipterocarp Forest (DF) | The original DF is tall forest which is characterized by the presence of a fairly high biomass density of large trees of the family Dipterocarpaceae, and often Leguminosae and Lauraceae. The original DF has been very heavily disturbed and nearly all of plants in DF are secondary growth of different species composition from that in the original forest. |
| Freshwater Swamp Forest (FSF) | Plant species composition in FSF varies greatly, and may be locally diverse, or dominated by one species. The tree canopy is generally rather open, but with extensive patches of low scrub in the most poorly-drained areas. |
| Mangrove Forest (MF) | Mangrove is characterized by a relatively few species of trees growing in coastal areas inundated with seawater. Nipah is a palm, which forms pure species stands where salt and fresh water mix. |
| Peat Swamp Forest (PSF) | The structure of PSF varies greatly, ranging from low, stunted vegetation to forest resembling DF. Floral composition is equally variable. The habitat is characterized by a layer of peat (slightly decomposed plant material), 0.5 to over 20 m deep developed on marine alluvium. |
| Palm Oil Plantation (POP) | POP's are planted on a large scale with species of palm tree, for the purpose of producing oil palm. Most of the DF has been replaced by POP in Sabah especially in the south-eastern part. |