Abstract

Animals select habitats that will ultimately optimize their fitness through access to favorable resources, such as food, mates, and breeding sites. However, access to these resources may be limited by bottom‐up effects, such as availability, and top‐down effects, such as risk avoidance and competition, including that with humans. Competition between wildlife and people over resources, specifically over space, has played a significant role in the worldwide decrease in large carnivores. The goal of this study was to determine the habitat selection of cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) in a human‐wildlife landscape at multiple spatial scales. Cheetahs are a wide‐ranging, large carnivore, whose significant decline is largely attributed to habitat loss and fragmentation. It is believed that 77% of the global cheetah population ranges outside protected areas, yet little is known about cheetahs’ resource use in areas where they co‐occur with people. The selection, or avoidance, of three anthropogenic variables (human footprint density, distance to main roads and wildlife areas) and five environmental variables (open habitat, semiclosed habitat, edge density, patch density and slope), at multiple spatial scales, was determined by analyzing collar data from six cheetahs. Cheetahs selected variables at different scales; anthropogenic variables were selected at broader scales (720–1440 m) than environmental variables (90–180 m), suggesting that anthropogenic pressures affect habitat selection at a home‐range level, whilst environmental variables influence site‐level habitat selection. Cheetah presence was best explained by human presence, wildlife areas, semiclosed habitat, edge density and slope. Cheetahs showed avoidance for humans and steep slopes and selected for wildlife areas and areas with high proportions of semiclosed habitat and edge density. Understanding a species’ resource requirements, and how these might be affected by humans, is crucial for conservation. Using a multiscale approach, we provide new insights into the habitat selection of a large carnivore living in a human‐wildlife landscape.

Highlights

  • Habitat is a selection of biotic and abiotic factors that provide a space for a species to live (Kearney, 2006)

  • We investigate the multiscale habitat selection of cheetahs (Acinonyx jubatus) in a landscape where they co-­occur with people

  • Our results indicate a strong avoidance of cheetahs to human pressures, proving the importance of areas that are set aside for wildlife

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Summary

Introduction

Habitat is a selection of biotic and abiotic factors that provide a space for a species to live (Kearney, 2006). Animals will ideally select habitats that maximize their fitness, whereby longevity and reproduction are increased, by optimizing access to food, mates, and other resources (Orians & Wittenberger, 1991). Numerous studies have shown that human presence can influence species’ distribution and behavior, with the possibility of excluding them from key resources. This has resulted in the decline and range contraction of many mammalian species (Ogutu, Owen-­Smith, Piepho, & Said, 2011; Ripple et al, 2014, 2015). One approach is by determining the anthropogenic and environmental drivers that influence the habitat selection of carnivores in landscapes where they co-­occur with people

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