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Doctorat
Inde
2020
Distribution and demography of carnivores in some parts of semi arid landscape of western india
Titre : Distribution and demography of carnivores in some parts of semi arid landscape of western india
Auteur : AYAN SADHU
Université de soutenance : Saurashtra University
Grade : Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) in Wildlife Science 2020
Résumé partiel
Tiger populations have declined globally due to poaching, prey depletion, and habitat
loss. The westernmost tiger population of Ranthambhore in India is typified by
bottlenecks, small size, and isolation ; problems that plague many large carnivore
populations worldwide. Such populations are likely to have depressed demographic
parameters and are vulnerable to extinction due to demographic and environmental
stochasticity. A combination of techniques that included radio telemetry, camera traps,
direct observations, and photo documentation was used to obtain 3492 observations on
97 individually known tigers in Ranthambhore between 2006-2014 to estimate
demographic parameters. Tiger density was estimated from systematic camera trap
sampling using spatially explicit capture-recapture (SECR) framework and subsequently
compared model inferred density with near actual density (since all tigers in RTR were
individually known). SECR tiger density was same as actual density and recovered from
4.6 (SE 1.19) to 7.5 (SE 1.25) tigers/100km2
over the years. Male : female ratio was 0.76
(SE 0.07), and cub : adult tigress ratio at 0.48 (SE 0.12). Average litter size was estimated
at 2.24 (SE 0.14). Male recruitment from cub to sub-adult stage (77.8%, SE 2.2) was
higher than that of females (62.5%, SE 2.4). However, male recruitment rate as breeding
adults from the sub-adult stage (72.6%, SE 2.0) was lower than females (86.7%, SE 1.3).
Annual survival rates, estimated by known-fate models, of cubs (85.4%, CI95% 80.3-
90.5%) were lower than that of juvenile (97.0%, CI95% 95.4-98.7%) and sub-adult
(96.4%, CI95% 94.0-98.9%) tigers. Adult male (84.8%, CI95% 80.6-89.2%) and female
(88.7%, CI95% 85.3-92.2%) annual survival rates were similar. Human-caused mortality
was 47% in cubs and 38% in adults. Mean dispersal age was 33.9 months (SE 0.8), males
dispersed further (61 km, SE 2) than females (12 km, SE 1.3). Higher age of first
reproduction (54.5 months, SE 3.7) with longer inter-birth intervals (29.6 months, SE
3.15) was likely to be an effect of high tiger density. Demographic parameters of
Ranthambhore tigers were similar to other tiger populations. With no signs of inbreeding
depression, there seems to be no imminent need for genetic rescue. The best long-term
conservation strategy would be to establish and manage a metapopulation in the
Ranthambhore landscape.
Page publiée le 22 janvier 2023