Abstract

Southern Iran is a conservation priority area for the endangered Persian onager (Equus hemionus onager), which is threatened by habitat fragmentation and conflict with local communities. To better understand factors that influence onager conservation, we administered a questionnaire in local communities to survey their ecological knowledge, personal experience related to onager, and attitudes toward traditional solutions for reducing crop damage by onager. In addition, we used resistant kernel and factorial least-cost path analyses to identify core areas and corridors for onager movement, and spatial randomization of vehicle collisions and crossing locations to test the predictive ability of resistant kernel and factorial least-cost path predictions of movement. We found that local communities that were knowledgeable about onagers experienced less crop damage from onager compared with those who used traditional methods. Habitat connectivity models revealed that core areas of movement are highly concentrated at the center of protected areas. Some sections of core areas have been cut off by roads where most vehicle collisions with onagers occurred. We propose that effective onager conservation will require integrated landscape-level management to reduce mortality risk, protection of core areas and corridors, development of mitigation strategies to reduce vehicle collisions, and conflict mediation between local communities and onagers.

Highlights

  • Southern Iran is a conservation priority area for the endangered Persian onager (Equus hemionus onager), which is threatened by habitat fragmentation and conflict with local communities

  • We used spatial randomization of vehicle collisions and crossing locations to test the predictive ability of resistant kernel and factorial least-cost path predictions of ­movement[18]

  • Most people believed that the presence of onager around their village lead to crop damage (87.1%)

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Summary

Introduction

Southern Iran is a conservation priority area for the endangered Persian onager (Equus hemionus onager), which is threatened by habitat fragmentation and conflict with local communities. Major threats to onager are conflicts resulting from crop-raiding, and road collisions occurring when onager cross roads to access c­ rops[3,5], and grazing competition between herbivores and l­ivestock[6,7]. Increases in local onager abundance following better protection measures and management has resulted in onagers moving to agricultural lands which abut the protected areas in which their populations are concentrated during dry months. Such seasonal movement, coupled with an increasing onager population, results in intensified conflicts with the agro-pastoral community such as increasing crop-raiding incidences. The Hassan Abad-Meshkaan road, which skirts the periphery of the area, has impacted the connectivity of the onager population and has become a source of mortality and hazard for both onagers and local communities

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