Literature DB >> 26400445

Conserving tigers in working landscapes.

Pranav Chanchani1,2,3, Barry R Noon1,2, Larissa L Bailey1,2, Rekha A Warrier1,2,3.   

Abstract

Tiger (Panthera tigris) conservation efforts in Asia are focused on protected areas embedded in human-dominated landscapes. A system of protected areas is an effective conservation strategy for many endangered species if the network is large enough to support stable metapopulations. The long-term conservation of tigers requires that the species be able to meet some of its life-history needs beyond the boundaries of small protected areas and within the working landscape, including multiple-use forests with logging and high human use. However, understanding of factors that promote or limit the occurrence of tigers in working landscapes is incomplete. We assessed the relative influence of protection status, prey occurrence, extent of grasslands, intensity of human use, and patch connectivity on tiger occurrence in the 5400 km(2) Central Terai Landscape of India, adjacent to Nepal. Two observer teams independently surveyed 1009 km of forest trails and water courses distributed across 60 166-km(2) cells. In each cell, the teams recorded detection of tiger signs along evenly spaced trail segments. We used occupancy models that permitted multiscale analysis of spatially correlated data to estimate cell-scale occupancy and segment-scale habitat use by tigers as a function of management and environmental covariates. Prey availability and habitat quality, rather than protected-area designation, influenced tiger occupancy. Tiger occupancy was low in some protected areas in India that were connected to extensive areas of tiger habitat in Nepal, which brings into question the efficacy of current protection and management strategies in both India and Nepal. At a finer spatial scale, tiger habitat use was high in trail segments associated with abundant prey and large grasslands, but it declined as human and livestock use increased. We speculate that riparian grasslands may provide tigers with critical refugia from human activity in the daytime and thereby promote tiger occurrence in some multiple-use forests. Restrictions on human-use in high-quality tiger habitat in multiple-use forests may complement existing protected areas and collectively promote the persistence of tiger populations in working landscapes.
© 2015 Society for Conservation Biology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  bosques de usos múltiples; co-ocurrencia entre tigres y humanos; conectividad; connectivity; conservación transfronteriza; human-tiger cooccurrence; modelo de ocupación; multiple use forests; occupancy modeling; protected areas; transboundary conservation; áreas protegidas

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26400445     DOI: 10.1111/cobi.12633

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Conserv Biol        ISSN: 0888-8892            Impact factor:   6.560


  7 in total

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2.  Tracking changes and preventing loss in critical tiger habitat.

Authors:  Anup R Joshi; Eric Dinerstein; Eric Wikramanayake; Michael L Anderson; David Olson; Benjamin S Jones; John Seidensticker; Susan Lumpkin; Matthew C Hansen; Nigel C Sizer; Crystal L Davis; Suzanne Palminteri; Nathan R Hahn
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2016-04-01       Impact factor: 14.136

3.  Tigers in the Terai: Strong evidence for meta-population dynamics contributing to tiger recovery and conservation in the Terai Arc Landscape.

Authors:  Kanchan Thapa; Eric Wikramanayake; Sabita Malla; Krishna Prasad Acharya; Babu Ram Lamichhane; Naresh Subedi; Chiranjivi Prasad Pokharel; Gokarna Jung Thapa; Maheshwar Dhakal; Ashish Bista; Jimmy Borah; Mudit Gupta; Kamlesh K Maurya; Ghana Shyam Gurung; Shant Raj Jnawali; Narendra Man Babu Pradhan; Shiv Raj Bhata; Saroj Koirala; Dipankar Ghose; Joseph Vattakaven
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4.  Recovery planning towards doubling wild tiger Panthera tigris numbers: Detailing 18 recovery sites from across the range.

Authors:  Abishek Harihar; Pranav Chanchani; Jimmy Borah; Rachel Jane Crouthers; Yury Darman; Thomas N E Gray; Shariff Mohamad; Benjamin Miles Rawson; Mark Darmaraj Rayan; Jennifer Lucy Roberts; Robert Steinmetz; Sunarto Sunarto; Febri Anggriawan Widodo; Meraj Anwar; Shiv Raj Bhatta; Jayam Peter Prem Chakravarthi; Youde Chang; Gordon Congdon; Chittaranjan Dave; Soumen Dey; Boominathan Durairaj; Pavel Fomenko; Harish Guleria; Mudit Gupta; Ghana Gurung; Bopanna Ittira; Jyotirmay Jena; Alexey Kostyria; Krishna Kumar; Vijay Kumar; Phurba Lhendup; Peiqi Liu; Sabita Malla; Kamlesh Maurya; Vijay Moktan; Nguyen Dao Ngoc Van; Karmila Parakkasi; Rungnapa Phoonjampa; Worrapan Phumanee; Anil Kumar Singh; Carrie Stengel; Samundra Ambuhang Subba; Kanchan Thapa; Tiju C Thomas; Christopher Wong; Michael Baltzer; Dipankar Ghose; Sejal Worah; Joseph Vattakaven
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-11-08       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Impact of prey occupancy and other ecological and anthropogenic factors on tiger distribution in Thailand's western forest complex.

Authors:  Somphot Duangchantrasiri; Pornkamol Jornburom; Sitthichai Jinamoy; Anak Pattanavibool; James E Hines; Todd W Arnold; John Fieberg; James L D Smith
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2019-02-18       Impact factor: 2.912

6.  Wetlands are keystone habitats for jaguars in an intercontinental biodiversity hotspot.

Authors:  Joe J Figel; Sebastián Botero-Cañola; German Forero-Medina; Juan David Sánchez-Londoño; Leonor Valenzuela; Reed F Noss
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-09-11       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Genetic analyses reveal population structure and recent decline in leopards (Panthera pardus fusca) across the Indian subcontinent.

Authors:  Supriya Bhatt; Suvankar Biswas; Krithi Karanth; Bivash Pandav; Samrat Mondol
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2020-02-04       Impact factor: 2.984

  7 in total

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