| Literature DB >> 26114626 |
Igor Khorozyan1, Mahmood Soofi2, Amirhossein Khaleghi Hamidi2, Arash Ghoddousi1, Matthias Waltert1.
Abstract
Human-carnivore conflicts challenge biodiversity conservation and local livelihoods, but the role of diseases of domestic animals in their predation by carnivores is poorly understood. We conducted a human-leopard (Panthera pardus) conflict study throughout all 34 villages around Golestan National Park, Iran in order to find the most important conflict determinants and to use them in predicting the probabilities of conflict and killing of cattle, sheep and goats, and dogs. We found that the more villagers were dissatisfied with veterinary services, the more likely they were to lose livestock and dogs to leopard predation. Dissatisfaction occurred when vaccination crews failed to visit villages at all or, in most cases, arrived too late to prevent diseases from spreading. We suggest that increased morbidity of livestock makes them particularly vulnerable to leopard attacks. Moreover, conflicts and dog killing were higher in villages located closer to the boundaries of the protected area than in distant villages. Therefore, we appeal for improved enforcement and coordination of veterinary services in our study area, and propose several priority research topics such as veterinarian studies, role of wild prey in diseases of domestic animals, and further analysis of potential conflict predictors.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26114626 PMCID: PMC4483275 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0129221
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Location of Golestan National Park (GNP), Ghorkhod Protected Area (GPA), Zav 1 Protected Area (ZAV1), Zav 2 Protected Area (ZAV2), Loveh Protected Area (LPA) and villages with or without human-leopard (Panthera pardus) conflict.
The significant effects of satisfaction with veterinary services on human-leopard (Panthera pardus) conflict, cattle killing, sheep and goat killing, and dog killing by leopards in villages around Golestan National Park, Iran.
| Response variable | Chi-square χ2 | Significance level | Odds ratio |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 8.93 | 0.003 | 0.10 |
|
| 3.88 | 0.049 | 0.21 |
|
| 9.17 | 0.002 | 0.08 |
|
| 6.44 | 0.011 | 0.08 |
Fig 2The effect of satisfaction and dissatisfaction with veterinary services on the probabilities of conflict, cattle killing, sheep and goat (shoat) killing and dog killing modeled by logistic regression.
The error bars indicate standard error.
The models predicting the probabilities of human-leopard conflict and killing of cattle, sheep and goats, and dogs by leopards from the villagers’ satisfaction with veterinary services.
| Response variable | Equation | Parameter estimates | % | AUC | Likelihood-ratio test |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| p = 1/(1 + exp(2.342×VS– 0.875)) | Wald = 7.907, | 75.8 | 0.76 | χ2 = 9.435, |
|
| p = 1/(1 + exp(1.540×VS– 1.540)) | Wald = 3.624, | 66.7 | 0.68 | χ2 = 3.985, |
|
| p = 1/(1 + exp(2.526×VS– 2.015)) | Wald = 7.655, | 75.8 | 0.77 | χ2 = 9.777, |
|
| p = 1/(1 + exp(2.521×VS– 2.773)) | Wald = 4.829, | 75.8 | 0.76 | χ2 = 7.018, |
Abbreviations: AUC–area under the Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC), p–probability of response variable, P–significance level, VS–satisfaction with veterinary services (1 if satisfied, 0 if not), %–percentage of correct classification.