Abstract

Understanding large carnivore occurrence patterns in anthropogenic landscapes adjacent to protected areas is central to developing actions for species conservation in an increasingly human-dominated world. Among large carnivores, leopards (Panthera pardus) are the most widely distributed felid. Leopards occupying anthropogenic landscapes frequently come into conflict with humans, which often results in leopard mortality. Leopards’ use of anthropogenic landscapes, and their frequent involvement with conflict, make them an insightful species for understanding the determinants of carnivore occurrence across human-dominated habitats. We evaluated the spatial variation in leopard site use across a multiple-use landscape in Tanzania’s Ruaha landscape. Our study region encompassed i) Ruaha National Park, where human activities were restricted and sport hunting was prohibited; ii) the Pawaga-Idodi Wildlife Management Area, where wildlife sport hunting, wildlife poaching, and illegal pastoralism all occurred at relatively low levels; and iii) surrounding village lands where carnivores and other wildlife were frequently exposed to human-carnivore conflict related-killings and agricultural habitat conversion and development. We investigated leopard occurrence across the study region via an extensive camera trapping network. We estimated site use as a function of environmental (i.e. habitat and anthropogenic) variables using occupancy models within a Bayesian framework. We observed a steady decline in leopard site use with downgrading protected area status from the national park to the Wildlife Management Area and village lands. Our findings suggest that human-related activities such as increased livestock presence and proximity to human households exerted stronger influence than prey availability on leopard site use, and were the major limiting factors of leopard distribution across the gradient of human pressure, especially in the village lands outside Ruaha National Park. Overall, our study provides valuable information about the determinants of spatial distribution of leopards in human-dominated landscapes that can help inform conservation strategies in the borderlands adjacent to protected areas.

Highlights

  • As apex predators, large-bodied mammals of the order Carnivora can exert important influence on regulation of trophic interactions and the maintenance of ecosystem functions [1, 2]

  • We investigated the factors affecting the probability of leopard site use at the interface of protected and unprotected habitat in southern Tanzania’s Ruaha landscape

  • We recorded 197 leopard detections at 36 out of 77 cameratrap stations (CTs) in the national park, 35 detections at 6 out of 16 CTs in Wildlife Management Area (WMA), and no detections at the 35 CTs installed in the village lands, despite the consistent sampling effort in this area (Fig 1; Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Large-bodied mammals of the order Carnivora can exert important influence on regulation of trophic interactions and the maintenance of ecosystem functions [1, 2] Large carnivores, besides their intrinsic value as species [3], are important revenue-generators for a multimillion-dollar ecotourism and sport hunting industry that contributes to national economies as well as the conservation and management of wildlife and wilderness, in Africa [4, 5]. 68% of the most suitable habitats for leopards in South Africa have been estimated to occur outside national parks and protected areas, in areas of human occupation and subject to habitat conversion [16] These human-dominated habitats can be essential to the conservation of large carnivore populations [10, 11, 17, 18]. Determining the extent to which large carnivores can occupy areas of increasing human pressure, such as those represented by human encroachment of wildlands and agro-pastoralism, is of major importance for their conservation

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