Effect of uneven tolerance to human disturbance on dominance interactions of top predators.

IF 5.2 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Conservation Biology Pub Date : 2024-09-03 DOI:10.1111/cobi.14364
Pablo Villalva, Francisco Palomares, Marina Zanin
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Abstract

Anthropogenic activities may alter felid assemblage structure, facilitating the persistence of tolerant species (commonly mesopredators), excluding ecologically demanding ones (top predators) and, consequently, changing coexistence rules. We aimed to determine how human activities influence intraguild relationships among top predators and their cascading effects on mesopredators, which remain poorly understood despite evidence of top carnivore decline. We used structural equation modeling at a continental scale to investigate how habitat quality and quantity, livestock density, and other human pressures modified the intraguild relations of the 3 species that are at the top of the food chain in the Neotropics: jaguars (Panthera onca), pumas (Puma concolor), and ocelots (Leopardus pardalis). We included presence-absence data derived from systematic studies compiled in Neocarnivores data set for these felid species at 0.0833° resolution. Human disturbance reduced the probability of jaguar occurrence by -0.35 standard deviations. Unexpectedly, the presence of sheep (Ovis aries) or goats (Capra aegagrus hircus) and jaguars was positively related to the presence of pumas, whereas puma presence was negatively related to the presence of ocelots. Extent of forest cover had more of an effect on jaguar (β = 0.23) and ocelot (β = 0.12) occurrences than the extent of protected area, which did not have a significant effect. The lack of effect of human activities on puma presence and the positive effect of small livestock supports the notion that pumas are more adaptable to habitat disturbance than jaguars. Our findings suggest that human disturbance has the potential to reverse the hierarchical competition dominance among large felids, leading to an unbalanced community structure. This shift disadvantages jaguars and elevates the position of pumas in the assemblage hierarchy, resulting in the exclusion of ocelots, despite their relatively lower susceptibility to anthropogenic disturbance. Our results suggest that conservation efforts should extend beyond protected areas to encompass the surrounding landscape, where complexities and potential conflicts are more pronounced.

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对人类干扰的不同容忍度对顶级捕食者优势互动的影响。
人类活动可能会改变猫科动物的组合结构,促进耐受性物种(通常是中食肉动物)的持续生存,排斥生态要求高的物种(顶级食肉动物),从而改变共存规则。我们的目的是确定人类活动如何影响顶级食肉动物之间的群落内部关系及其对中层食肉动物的连带影响,尽管有证据表明顶级食肉动物在减少,但人们对这些影响的了解仍然很少。我们在大陆范围内使用结构方程模型来研究栖息地的质量和数量、牲畜密度以及其他人类压力如何改变新热带地区处于食物链顶端的三个物种--美洲虎(Panthera onca)、美洲狮(Puma concolor)和猫鼬(Leopardus pardalis)--的群内关系。我们以 0.0833° 的分辨率将这些猫科动物的存在-不存在数据纳入了新食肉动物数据集的系统研究中。人类干扰使美洲虎出现的概率降低了-0.35个标准差。意想不到的是,绵羊(Ovis aries)或山羊(Capra aegagrus hircus)和美洲虎的出现与美洲狮的出现呈正相关,而美洲狮的出现与猫鼬的出现呈负相关。森林覆盖率对美洲虎(β = 0.23)和猫鼬(β = 0.12)出没的影响大于保护区范围,保护区范围对美洲虎和猫鼬出没的影响并不显著。人类活动对美洲狮的出现没有影响,而小型牲畜的出现则产生了积极影响,这支持了美洲狮比美洲虎更能适应栖息地干扰的观点。我们的研究结果表明,人类干扰有可能逆转大型猫科动物之间的等级竞争优势,导致群落结构失衡。这种变化使美洲虎处于不利地位,并提高了美洲狮在群落等级中的地位,导致猫鼬被排除在外,尽管它们对人为干扰的易感性相对较低。我们的研究结果表明,保护工作不应局限于保护区,还应包括周围的地貌,因为那里的复杂性和潜在冲突更为突出。
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来源期刊
Conservation Biology
Conservation Biology 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
12.70
自引率
3.20%
发文量
175
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Conservation Biology welcomes submissions that address the science and practice of conserving Earth's biological diversity. We encourage submissions that emphasize issues germane to any of Earth''s ecosystems or geographic regions and that apply diverse approaches to analyses and problem solving. Nevertheless, manuscripts with relevance to conservation that transcend the particular ecosystem, species, or situation described will be prioritized for publication.
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