Abstract
AbstractTo reinforce Eurasian lynx populations in central Europe, 20 lynx from Slovakia and Switzerland were translocated to the Palatinate Forest between 2016 and 2020. Using a systematic camera trapping array consisting of 80 camera trapping sites in a 1,000 km² study area located in the centre of the approximately 1,800 km² Palatinate Forest, we aim to describe the status of the population in the final stages of the reintroduction project in winter and spring 2019/20 and 2020/21. We also use our data to provide a first estimate of population density of the newly established population. With an estimate of 0.52 independent individuals per 100 km², population density in the Palatinate Forest was still significantly lower than the densities of well-established reintroduced populations. The number of independent individuals detected in the study area decreased from 15 individuals in 2019/20 to 11 individuals in 2020/21, thus significantly below the number of lynx translocated. The low abundance in the Palatinate Forest can be explained by the dispersal of several individuals to the Vosges (France), which, together with the Palatinate Forest, form a continuous area of suitable lynx habitat of approximately 8,000 km². Our results may thus reflect the status of a young population that can expand over a potentially large area. Nevertheless, in light of the low population density, we strongly recommend a synchronized and harmonized transboundary monitoring program to keep track of the development of this important Franco-German lynx population. In case population density remains low, supportive measures need to be considered.
Funder
Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference42 articles.
1. Boitani L, Linnell JDC (2015) Bringing large mammals back: large carnivores in Europe. In: Pereira HM, Navarro LM (eds) Rewilding European landscapes. Springer, Cham
2. Bonn Lynx Expert Group (2021) Recommendations for the conservation of the eurasian lynx in Western and Central Europe. CatNews Special Issue 14:78–86
3. Borchers DL, Efford M (2008) Spatially explicit maximum likelihood methods for capture–recapture studies. Biometrics 64:377–385
4. Breitenmoser U, Breitenmoser-Würsten C (2008) Der Luchs. Ein Großraubtier in Der Kulturlandschaft. Salm, Bern
5. Breitenmoser U, Krebühl J, Heider C, Breitenmoser-Wprsten C (2021) Challenges in the conservation oft he eurasian lynx in Continental Europe – an introduction. CatNews Special Issue 14:3–4