Effects of Livestock Grazing on Spatiotemporal Interactions Between Snow Leopards and Ungulate Prey

IF 3.7 1区 生物学 Q1 ZOOLOGY Integrative zoology Pub Date : 2024-12-17 DOI:10.1111/1749-4877.12935
Kai Xu, Wenhong Xiao, Dazhi Hu, Marcel Holyoak, Chengpeng Ji, Juntao Zhang, Duifang Ma, Zhishu Xiao
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Abstract

Spatiotemporal interactions between predators and prey are central to maintaining sustainable functioning ecosystems and community stability. For wild ungulates and their predators, livestock grazing is an important anthropogenic disturbance causing population declines and modifying their interactions over time and space. However, it is poorly understood how fine-scale grazing affects the spatiotemporal responses of predators, prey, and their interactions. Two opposing hypotheses describe a dichotomy of possible effects. The human shield hypothesis states that people can protect prey because predators avoid areas with high human-induced mortality risk, whereas in the human competitor hypothesis, humans compete for prey and negatively impact predators through reduced prey availability. We used camera-trapping data from the Gansu Qilianshan National Nature Reserve in Northwest China to measure occupancy, daily activity patterns, and spatiotemporal interactions between snow leopards (Panthera uncia), the dominant predator, and their ungulate prey in areas with contrasting grazing intensities. The results of grazing were consistent with both the human-shield and human-competitor hypotheses, affecting spatiotemporal patterns and interactions of predators and prey. For the primary prey species, blue sheep (Pseudois nayaur), their spatial and temporal patterns were affected by grazing, which led to a reduction in interaction frequencies with snow leopards. For secondary prey, grazing led to reduced interaction frequencies with snow leopards for white-lipped deer (Przewalskium albirostris) and red deer (Cervus yarkandensis), but increased frequencies for alpine musk deer (Moschus chrysogaster). Our results indicate how both competition among livestock and prey and predator or prey avoidance of grazed areas can impact populations and predator–prey interactions. Our findings are relevant to grazing management and snow leopard conservation.

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牲畜放牧对雪豹与猎物时空互动的影响
捕食者和猎物之间的时空相互作用对维持生态系统的可持续功能和群落稳定至关重要。对于野生有蹄类动物及其捕食者来说,放牧是一种重要的人为干扰,导致种群数量下降,并改变它们之间的时空相互作用。然而,人们对精细尺度放牧如何影响捕食者、猎物及其相互作用的时空反应知之甚少。两种相反的假设描述了两种可能的影响。人盾假说认为,人类可以保护猎物,因为捕食者会避开人类造成的高死亡率的区域,而在人类竞争者假说中,人类竞争猎物,并通过减少猎物的可用性对捕食者产生负面影响。利用甘肃祁连山国家级自然保护区的相机捕获数据,研究了不同放牧强度地区优势捕食者雪豹(Panthera uncia)与其有蹄类猎物的占用、日常活动模式和时空相互作用。放牧的结果符合人-盾假说和人-竞争者假说,影响了捕食者和猎物的时空格局和相互作用。对于主要猎物蓝羊(Pseudois nayaur)来说,它们的时空格局受到放牧的影响,导致与雪豹的相互作用频率降低。对于次要猎物,放牧导致白唇鹿(Przewalskium albirostris)和马鹿(Cervus yarkandensis)与雪豹的相互作用频率降低,而高山麝(Moschus chrysogaster)与雪豹的相互作用频率增加。我们的研究结果表明,牲畜和猎物之间的竞争以及捕食者或猎物对放牧地区的回避如何影响种群数量和捕食者-猎物相互作用。我们的研究结果与放牧管理和雪豹保护有关。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
12.10%
发文量
81
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The official journal of the International Society of Zoological Sciences focuses on zoology as an integrative discipline encompassing all aspects of animal life. It presents a broader perspective of many levels of zoological inquiry, both spatial and temporal, and encourages cooperation between zoology and other disciplines including, but not limited to, physics, computer science, social science, ethics, teaching, paleontology, molecular biology, physiology, behavior, ecology and the built environment. It also looks at the animal-human interaction through exploring animal-plant interactions, microbe/pathogen effects and global changes on the environment and human society. Integrative topics of greatest interest to INZ include: (1) Animals & climate change (2) Animals & pollution (3) Animals & infectious diseases (4) Animals & biological invasions (5) Animal-plant interactions (6) Zoogeography & paleontology (7) Neurons, genes & behavior (8) Molecular ecology & evolution (9) Physiological adaptations
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