南非非洲野狗(Lycaon pictus)现状和分布的20年回顾

Samantha K. Nicholson, David G. Marneweck, P. Lindsey, K. Marnewick, H. Davies-Mostert
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引用次数: 15

摘要

南非是仅有的七个存在非洲野狗(Lycaon pictus)种群的国家之一。2017年,全国种群数量为372只成年和一岁幼崽,由三个亚种群组成:1)克鲁格国家公园(Kruger), 2)通过重新引入孤立的围栏保护区而建立的集中管理的超种群,以及3)自然发生在保护区外的自由漫游种群。我们评估了这三个亚群中每一个种群规模和增长率的长期趋势(4代野狗,约20年)。我们发现克鲁格支持一个庞大的种群,随着时间的推移,这个种群在减少。随着时间的推移,超种群是唯一一个显著增加的亚种群(无论是种群规模还是种群数量),这可能是由于强化的保护工作以及自1998年以来将野狗重新引入15个额外的保护区。尽管由于人为的威胁,狼群的数量有所下降,但自由漫游的亚种群数量仍然很小,但很稳定。尽管狼群的数量有所增加,但全国的总数量仍保持稳定。在过去的二十年里,克鲁格一直支持全国人口的最高比例。然而,随着时间的推移,超种群的贡献显著增加。很明显,尽管在三个亚种群之间的调查努力存在差异,但南非的野狗种群数量很少(约500只),但稳定,而亚种群的贡献变得越来越重要。该国的情况需要对全国野狗种群进行集约化、适应性管理,并证明了这种管理的好处。虽然这一评估提供了三个亚种群的基线信息,但南非的野狗保护将从平等的调查努力和准确评估长期种群趋势的标准化方法中受益匪浅。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A 20-Year Review of the Status and Distribution of African Wild Dogs (Lycaon pictus) in South Africa
South Africa is one of only seven countries with a viable population of African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus). The national population in 2017 was 372 adults and yearlings and comprised three subpopulations: 1) Kruger National Park (Kruger), 2) an intensively managed metapopulation established through reintroductions into isolated, fenced reserves, and 3) a free-roaming population that occurs naturally outside protected areas. We assessed the long-term (four wild dog generations, ∼20 years) trends in population size and growth rate within each of these three subpopulations. We found that Kruger supports a substantial population, which has declined over time. The metapopulation is the only subpopulation that has increased significantly over time (both in population size and number of packs), likely due to intensive conservation efforts and the reintroduction of wild dogs into 15 additional reserves since 1998. The free-roaming subpopulation has remained small but stable, even though the number of packs has declined due to anthropogenic threats. The overall national population has remained stable even though the number of packs has increased. Kruger has consistently supported the highest proportion of the national population over the last two decades. However, the contribution of the metapopulation has increased significantly over time. It is clear that despite differences in survey effort among the three subpopulations, South Africa has a small (∼500) but stable population of wild dogs, with the metapopulation contribution becoming increasingly important. The circumstances in the country necessitate, and demonstrate the benefit of, intensive, adaptive management for the national population of wild dogs. While this assessment provides baseline information for the three subpopulations, wild dog conservation in South Africa would benefit greatly from equal survey effort and standardized methods to accurately assess long-term population trends.
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