Abstract

Unrelenting poaching to feed the illegal trafficking of rhinoceros (rhino) horn remains the principle threat to the persistence of south-central black and southern white rhino that live in the Kruger National Park (Kruger), South Africa. Other global environmental change drivers, such as unpredictable climatic conditions, impose additional uncertainties on the management and persistence of these species. The drought experienced in Kruger over the 2015/2016 rainy season may have affected rhino population growth and thus added an additional population pressure to the poaching pressure already occurring. Under drought conditions, reduced grass biomass predicts increased natural deaths and a subsequent decrease in birth rate for the grazing white rhino. Such variance in natural death and birth rates for the browsing black rhino are not expected under these conditions. We evaluated these predictions using rhino population survey data from 2013 to 2017. Comparisons of natural deaths and birth rates between pre- (2013/2014 and 2014/15), during- (2015/2016) and post-drought (2016/2017) periods in Kruger showed increased natural mortality and decreased births for white rhino, but no significant changes for black rhino, supporting our predictions. As a result, despite reduced poaching rates, the total mortality rate of white rhino remains significantly higher than the birth rate. Decreased poaching, decreased natural deaths and no apparent drought effects in black rhino resulted in a lower total mortality rate than the estimated birth rate in 2017. Active biological management and traditional anti-poaching initiatives together therefore represent the most likely way to buffer the impacts of decreased population growth through climate change and wildlife crime on the persistence of rhinos.

Highlights

  • Overharvesting of biological resources is a key driver of global environmental change [1]

  • Poaching of African rhinoceroses to supply the illegal wildlife trade with rhino horn escalated within South Africa from 2008 [5], with at least 2936 rhinos killed from 2011–2015 in the Kruger National Park (Kruger) alone [6]

  • The 2015/2016 drought in Kruger increased the natural death rate and decreased the birth rate of white rhino. These drought effects disrupted white rhino population dynamics and we noted a significant decline in population size despite constant poaching rates

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Summary

Introduction

Overharvesting of biological resources is a key driver of global environmental change [1]. Overharvesting can occur within ecosystems, biomes, landscapes, individual species or populations. Poachers extensively overharvest particular species to supply the everincreasing illegal wildlife trade [2]. Wildlife trafficking is one of the key threats to the persistence of many species [3], and reduces the legal benefits derived from wildlife. Drought impacts on rhinos commodities [4]. Poaching of African rhinoceroses (rhino) to supply the illegal wildlife trade with rhino horn escalated within South Africa from 2008 [5], with at least 2936 rhinos killed from 2011–2015 in the Kruger National Park (Kruger) alone [6]

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