4.6 Article

Survival and Mortality of Pumas (Puma concolor) in a Fragmented, Urbanizing Landscape

期刊

PLOS ONE
卷 10, 期 7, 页码 -

出版社

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0131490

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资金

  1. California State Department of Parks and Recreation
  2. California Department of Fish and Wildlife
  3. Nature Conservancy
  4. McBeth Foundation
  5. Anza Borrego Foundation
  6. Nature Reserve of Orange County
  7. National Science Foundation
  8. Foothill/Eastern Transportation Corridor Agency
  9. San Diego County Association of Governments Environmental Mitigation Program
  10. San Diego Foundation
  11. Felidae Conservation Fund
  12. Mountain Lion Foundation
  13. Santa Rosa Plateau Foundation
  14. Institute for Wildlife Studies
  15. private donors

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Wide-ranging large carnivores pose myriad challenges for conservation, especially in highly fragmented landscapes. Over a 13-year period, we combined monitoring of radio collared pumas (Puma concolor) with complementary multi-generational genetic analyses to inform puma conservation in southern California, USA. Our goals were to generate survivorship estimates, determine causes of mortality, identify barriers to movement, and determine the genetic and demographic challenges to puma persistence among >20,000,000 people and extensive urban, suburban, and exurban development. Despite protection from hunting, annual survival for radio collared pumas was surprisingly low (55.8%), and humans caused the majority of puma deaths. The most common sources of mortality were vehicle collisions (28% of deaths), and mortalities resulting from depredation permits issued after pumas killed domestic animals (17% of deaths). Other human-caused mortalities included illegal shootings, public safety removals, and human-caused wildfire. An interstate highway (I-15) bisecting this study area, and associated development, have created a nearly impermeable barrier to puma movements, resulting in severe genetic restriction and demographic isolation of the small puma population (n similar to 17-27 adults) in the Santa Ana Mountains west of I-15. Highways that bisect habitat or divide remaining conserved habitat, and associated ongoing development, threaten to further subdivide this already fragmented puma population and increase threats to survival. This study highlights the importance of combining demographic and genetic analyses, and illustrates that in the absence of effective measures to reduce mortality and enhance safe movement across highways, translocation of pumas, such as was done with the endangered Florida panther (P. c. coryi), may ultimately be necessary to prevent further genetic decline and ensure persistence of the Santa Ana Mountains population.

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