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Prey Abundance and Leopard Diet in a Plantation and Rainforest Landscape, Anamalai Hills, Western Ghats


Affiliations
1 Nature Conservation Foundation, 3076/5, 4th Cross, Gokulam Park, Mysore 570 002, India
 

Leopards use a wide range of habitats from natural forests to plantations in human-dominated landscapes. Within interface areas, understanding leopard ecology and diet can help in conservation management and conflict avoidance. In a fragmented rainforest and plantation landscape in southern India, we examined diet of large carnivores (with a focus on leopards) using scat analysis with DNA-based identification of predator species, and estimated relative abundance of prey species in different land uses through transect surveys. Large carnivores predominantly consumed wild prey species (98.1%) and domestic prey species contributed <2% to overall prey biomass. For leopards, four wild prey species (Indian muntjac, Indian spotted chevrotain, sambar and Indian porcupine) contributed 95.1% of prey biomass, with the rest being minor wild prey species (no livestock in identified scats). Wild prey species occurred across the landscape but varied in relative abundance by land-use type, with forest fragments supporting higher abundance of many species relative to tea and coffee plantations. As large carnivores mainly depend on wild prey and rainforest fragments act as refuges for these mammals within the tea and coffee plantations, it is important to continue to retain or restore these forest fragments.

Keywords

Diet, Leopards, Prey Abundance, Plantation, Tropical Rainforest.
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  • Prey Abundance and Leopard Diet in a Plantation and Rainforest Landscape, Anamalai Hills, Western Ghats

Abstract Views: 477  |  PDF Views: 164

Authors

Swati Sidhu
Nature Conservation Foundation, 3076/5, 4th Cross, Gokulam Park, Mysore 570 002, India
T. R. Shankar Raman
Nature Conservation Foundation, 3076/5, 4th Cross, Gokulam Park, Mysore 570 002, India
Divya Mudappa
Nature Conservation Foundation, 3076/5, 4th Cross, Gokulam Park, Mysore 570 002, India

Abstract


Leopards use a wide range of habitats from natural forests to plantations in human-dominated landscapes. Within interface areas, understanding leopard ecology and diet can help in conservation management and conflict avoidance. In a fragmented rainforest and plantation landscape in southern India, we examined diet of large carnivores (with a focus on leopards) using scat analysis with DNA-based identification of predator species, and estimated relative abundance of prey species in different land uses through transect surveys. Large carnivores predominantly consumed wild prey species (98.1%) and domestic prey species contributed <2% to overall prey biomass. For leopards, four wild prey species (Indian muntjac, Indian spotted chevrotain, sambar and Indian porcupine) contributed 95.1% of prey biomass, with the rest being minor wild prey species (no livestock in identified scats). Wild prey species occurred across the landscape but varied in relative abundance by land-use type, with forest fragments supporting higher abundance of many species relative to tea and coffee plantations. As large carnivores mainly depend on wild prey and rainforest fragments act as refuges for these mammals within the tea and coffee plantations, it is important to continue to retain or restore these forest fragments.

Keywords


Diet, Leopards, Prey Abundance, Plantation, Tropical Rainforest.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv109%2Fi2%2F323-330