Abstract
Understanding the dietary habits of sympatric apex carnivores advances our knowledge of ecological processes and aids their conservation. We compared the diets of the sympatric Snow Leopard Panthera uncia and Grey Wolf Canis lupus using standard micro-histological analyses of scats collected from the western complex of Nepal Himalaya. Our study revealed one of the highest recorded contributions of livestock to the diet of top predators (55% for Grey Wolf and 39% for Snow Leopard) and high dietary overlap (0.82) indicating potential exploitative or interference competition. Their diet composition, however, varied significantly based on their consumption of wild and domestic prey. Limitation in data precludes predicting direction and outcome of inter-specific interactions between these predators. Our findings suggest a high rate of negative interaction with humans in the region and plausibly retaliatory killings of these imperilled predators. To ensure the sustained survival of these two apex carnivores, conservation measures should enhance populations of their wild prey species while reducing livestock losses of the local community through preventive and mitigative interventions.
Highlights
Dietary habits of sympatric apex carnivores advance our understanding on ecological processes and regulation of the ecosystem functions, aiding their conservation (Macdonald 1983)
We studied the dietary habits of the Snow Leopard Panthera uncia and Grey Wolf Canis lupus which live sympatrically in the western complex of Nepal Himalaya
The western landscape is one of three priority landscapes identified by The Global Snow Leopard and Ecosystem Protection Program (GLSLEP) (DNPWC 2017)
Summary
Dietary habits of sympatric apex carnivores advance our understanding on ecological processes and regulation of the ecosystem functions, aiding their conservation (Macdonald 1983). Information on dietary overlap and interactions of sympatric carnivores, is limited in these mountainous landscapes and nonexistent from the western complex of Nepal Himalaya. With this background, we studied the dietary habits of the Snow Leopard Panthera uncia and Grey Wolf Canis lupus (hereafter referred to as ‘Wolf’) which live sympatrically in the western complex of Nepal Himalaya. Snow Leopards are twice the body size of Wolves (Jnawali et al 2011) and are solitary hunters with a stalking ambush hunting behaviour (Jackson & Hunter 1996). Wolves are coordinating cursorial pack-hunters (Viripaev & Vorobiev 1983)
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