Abstract

Accurate assessments of the patterns and drivers of livestock depredation by wild carnivores are vital for designing effective mitigation strategies to reduce human-wildlife conflict. Snow leopard’s (Panthera uncia) range extensively overlaps pastoralist land-use and livestock predation there is widely reported, but the ecological determinants of livestock consumption by snow leopards remain obscure. We investigated snow leopard dietary habits at seven sites across the Sanjiangyuan region of the Qinghai–Tibetan Plateau (QTP), an area central to the species’ global range. Snow leopard abundance, wild prey composition, and livestock density varied among those sites, thus allowing us to test the effects of various factors on snow leopard diet and livestock predation. Using DNA metabarcoding, we obtained highly resolved dietary data from 351 genetically verified snow leopard fecal samples. We then analyzed the prey preferences of snow leopards and examined ecological factors related to their livestock consumption. Across the sites, snow leopard prey was composed mainly of wild ungulates (mean = 81.5% of dietary sequences), particularly bharal (Pseudois nayaur), and supplemented with livestock (7.62%) and smaller mammals (marmots, pikas, mice; 10.7%). Snow leopards showed a strong preference for bharal, relative to livestock, based on their densities. Interestingly, both proportional and total livestock consumption by snow leopards increased linearly with local livestock biomass, but not with livestock density. That, together with a slight negative relationship with bharal density, supports apparent facilitation between wild and domestic prey. We also found a significant positive correlation between population densities of snow leopard and bharal, yet those densities showed slight negative relationships with livestock density. Our results highlight the importance of sufficient wild ungulate abundance to the conservation of viable snow leopard populations. Additionally, livestock protection is critically needed to reduce losses to snow leopard depredation, especially where local livestock abundances are high.

Highlights

  • The survival of large carnivores is threatened globally due to conflicts with humans (Ripple et al, 2014; Wolf and Ripple, 2017)

  • Samples that came from other sympatric carnivores [n = 307; mainly including gray wolf (Canis lupus), brown bear (Ursus arctos), leopard (Panthera pardus), Eurasian lynx (Lynx lynx), red fox (Vulpes vulpes), Tibetan fox (V. ferrilata), and Pallas’ cat (Otocolobus manul)] were not analyzed in this study

  • The results showed that snow leopards strongly preferred bharal over livestock across the sites (Figure 4), and that relatively high livestock consumption occurred only where livestock density was substantially greater than bharal density

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Summary

Introduction

The survival of large carnivores is threatened globally due to conflicts with humans (Ripple et al, 2014; Wolf and Ripple, 2017). In pastoral societies where humans and wild carnivores coexist, carnivore predation on domestic livestock is widespread (Mishra, 1997; Janeiro-Otero et al, 2020), and that can result in substantial economic costs that precipitate most human–carnivore conflicts. Such conflicts often lead to negative attitudes toward carnivores and even retaliatory killings that threaten carnivore species survival (Kissui, 2008). Recovery of the snow leopard’s wild ungulate prey populations may help reduce livestock predation (Mishra et al, 2003) through the mechanism of apparent facilitation, whereby the increased availability of one prey reduces predation on the alternative prey by their shared predator (Colton, 1987). The mode and dynamics of snow leopard predation on both wild and domestic prey in relation to their availabilities may vary among regions, depending on specific combinations of local ecological and social factors

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