4.7 Article

Low apex carnivore density does not release a subordinate competitor when driven by prey depletion

期刊

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
卷 261, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2021.109273

关键词

Intraguild competition; Large carnivore; Interspecific competition; African wild dog; Prey depletion; Kafue National Park

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [IOS1145749, DEB-2032131]
  2. National Geographic Society Big Cats Initiative
  3. Gemfields Inc.
  4. World Wildlife Fund-Netherlands Zambia
  5. The Bennink Foundation
  6. Painted Dog Conservation Inc.
  7. Wilderness Wildlife Trust
  8. Tusk Trust
  9. Panthera
  10. Elephant Charge
  11. Ntengu Safaris
  12. IUCN Save Our Species/European Union

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study found that the population of African wild dogs in the study area was not competitively released due to the low density of lions, but rather impacted by prey scarcity, indicating that the number of wild dogs is influenced by an optimal balance of prey and competitors.
Conservation of competitively subordinate carnivores presents a difficult challenge because they are limited by dominant competitors. Prey depletion is one of the leading causes of large carnivore decline worldwide, but little is known about the net effect of prey depletion on subordinate carnivores when their dominant competitors are also reduced. African wild dogs are often limited by high densities of dominant competitors, particularly lions. We measured African wild dog density and survival, using mark-recapture models fit to 8 years of data from 425 known individuals in the Greater Kafue Ecosystem, Zambia. The GKE is affected by prey depletion, particularly of large herbivores, and thus the density of lions is significantly lower than ecologically comparable ecosystems. Counter to expectations from mesopredator release theory, wild dog density in GKE was far lower than comparable ecosystems with higher lion and prey density, though annual survival rates were comparable to large and stable populations. Average pack size was small and home range size was among the largest recorded. Our results show that low lion density did not competitively release the GKE wild dog population and we infer that the low density of wild dogs was a product of low prey density. Our results suggest that there is an optimal ratio of prey and competitors at which wild dogs achieve their highest densities. This finding has immediate implications for the conservation of the endangered African wild dog, and broad implications for the conservation of subordinate species affected by resource depletion and intraguild competition.

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