2022
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13943
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Habitat use of and threats to African large carnivores in a mixed‐use landscape

Abstract: Large carnivores increasingly inhabit human-affected landscapes, which exhibit heterogeneity in biotic resources, anthropogenic pressures, and management strategies. Understanding large carnivore habitat use in these systems is critical for their conservation, as is the evaluation of competing management approaches and the impacts of significant land-use changes. We used occupancy modeling to investigate habitat use of an intact eastern African large carnivore guild across the 45,000 km 2 Ruaha-Rungwa landscap… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…In the context of large carnivore population status assessments and monitoring, population density is a commonly-employed and meaningful metric ( Boitani & Powell, 2012 ). Although other metrics of population status exist ( e.g ., occupancy— Strampelli et al, 2022a ), population density is increasingly recommended as the metric of choice to assess and monitor large carnivore populations ( Elliot & Gopalaswamy, 2016 ). In addition to estimating current status, estimating densities also allows comparison over time and between sites, enabling researchers and managers to understand how population status varies with biotic factors ( Searle et al, 2021 ), anthropogenic disturbances ( Balme, Slotow & Hunter, 2010 ; Henschel et al, 2011 ), or land management strategies ( Swanepoel, Somers & Dalerum, 2015 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the context of large carnivore population status assessments and monitoring, population density is a commonly-employed and meaningful metric ( Boitani & Powell, 2012 ). Although other metrics of population status exist ( e.g ., occupancy— Strampelli et al, 2022a ), population density is increasingly recommended as the metric of choice to assess and monitor large carnivore populations ( Elliot & Gopalaswamy, 2016 ). In addition to estimating current status, estimating densities also allows comparison over time and between sites, enabling researchers and managers to understand how population status varies with biotic factors ( Searle et al, 2021 ), anthropogenic disturbances ( Balme, Slotow & Hunter, 2010 ; Henschel et al, 2011 ), or land management strategies ( Swanepoel, Somers & Dalerum, 2015 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The complex is unfenced, and is surrounded by unprotected village lands to the south and east, and by additional OAs and GCAs to the west and north. Law enforcement is generally higher in the NP and the GRs, due to greater availability and investments of resources, and lower in the GCA, OA, and WMAs [47]. Nevertheless, due to boundary disputes, human settlements and intensive agriculture are present in an area of ~2,100 km 2 in south-west Ruaha NP [48].…”
Section: Study Areamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We employed a spatially replicated occupancy sampling approach [47,[55][56][57]. Each transect was divided into 500 m segments, and we recorded whether sign of each species was detected (1) or non-detected (0) within each segment.…”
Section: Data Collectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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