Effect of ecological and anthropogenic factors on grouping patterns in African lions across Kenya

Author:

Chege Mumbi12ORCID,Bertola Laura D.3,De Snoo Geert R.24ORCID,Ngene Shadrack1,Otieno Tobias5,Amoke Irene6,van 't Zelfde Maarten2,Dolrenry Stephanie7,Broekhuis Femke8ORCID,Tamis Will2,De Iongh Hans H.29,Elliot Nicholas B.10ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Wildlife Research and Training Institute Naivasha Kenya

2. Institute of Environmental Sciences CML Leiden University Leiden The Netherlands

3. Department of Biology University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

4. Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO‐KNAW) Wageningen The Netherlands

5. Ewaso Lions Nairobi Kenya

6. Kenya Wildlife Trust Nairobi Kenya

7. Lion Guardians Nairobi Kenya

8. Wildlife Ecology and Conservation Group Wageningen University and Research Wageningen The Netherlands

9. Department of Evolutionary Ecology, Department Biology University of Antwerp Antwerpen Belgium

10. Wildlife Counts Nairobi Kenya

Abstract

AbstractSocial carnivores frequently live in fission–fusion societies, where individuals that share a common territory or home range may be found alone, in subgroups, or altogether. Absolute group size and subgroup size is expected to vary according to resource distribution, but for species that are susceptible to anthropogenic pressures, other factors may be important drivers. African lions (Panthera leo) are the only truly social felid and lion prides are characterized by fission–fusion dynamics with social groups frequently splitting and reforming, and subgroup membership can change continuously and frequently. The number of individuals in a group can be reflective of social, ecological, and anthropogenic conditions. This dynamic behavior makes understanding lion grouping patterns crucial for tailoring conservation measures. The evolution of group living in lions has been the topic of numerous studies, and we drew on these to formulate hypotheses relating to group size and subgroup size variation. Based on data collected from 199 lion groups across eight sites in Kenya, we found that group sizes were smaller when lions were closer to human settlements, suggesting that edge effects are impacting lions at a national scale. Smaller groups were also more likely when they were far from water, and were associated with very low and very high levels of non‐tree vegetation. We found significant differences between the study sites, with the Maasai Mara having the largest groups (mean ± SD = 7.7 ± 4.7, range = 1–19), and Amboseli conservation area the smallest (4.3 ± 3.5, range = 1–14). While long‐term studies within a single site are well suited to thoroughly differentiate between absolute group size and subgroup size, our study provides unique insight into the correlates of grouping patterns in a vulnerable species at a national scale.

Funder

Liz Claiborne Art Ortenberg Foundation

African Wildlife Foundation

National Geographic Society

Publisher

Wiley

Reference49 articles.

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