4.2 Article

Home range variation in leopards living across the human density gradient

期刊

JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY
卷 102, 期 4, 页码 1138-1148

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jmammal/gyab068

关键词

habitat use; human carnivore interaction; human density; large carnivore; leopard; movement ecology; Panthera pardus

类别

资金

  1. Iranian Department of Environment
  2. Karnataka Forest Department
  3. Quagga Conservation Fund
  4. National Science Foundation [BCS 99-03949, BCS 1266389, RS 2069358, ATV 103659]
  5. L.S. B. Leakey Foundation
  6. Wenner-Gren Foundation [8386]
  7. National Geographic Society [B10-11, B12130K]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The study compared the home range size of leopards under different environmental conditions, revealing that leopard home range size is influenced by landscape productivity, gender, and human population density.
Home range size is a fundamental measure of animal space use, providing insight into habitat quality, animal density, and social organization. Human impacts increasingly are affecting wildlife, especially among wideranging species that encounter anthropogenic disturbance. Leopards (Panthera pardus) provide a useful model for studying this relationship because leopards coexist with people at high and low human densities and are sensitive to human disturbance. To compare leopard home range size across a range of human densities and other environmental conditions, we combined animal tracking data from 74 leopards in multiple studies with new analytical techniques that accommodate different sampling regimes. We predicted that home ranges would be smaller in more productive habitats and areas of higher human population density due to possible linkage with leopard prey subsidies from domestic species. We also predicted that male leopards would have larger home ranges than those of females. Home ranges varied in size from 14.5 km(2) in India to 885.6 km(2) in Namibia, representing a 60-fold magnitude of variation. Home range stability was evident for 95.2% of nontranslocated individuals and 38.5% of translocated individuals. Leopard home range sizes were negatively correlated with landscape productivity, and males used larger areas than females. Leopards in open habitats had a predicted negative correlation in home range size with human population density, but leopards in closed habitats used larger home ranges in areas with more people.

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