Affiliation:
1. School of the Environment University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland Australia
2. School of Environmental Science and Engineering Southern University of Science and Technology Shenzhen China
3. School of Environmental Sciences University of East Anglia Norwich UK
4. Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland Australia
Abstract
AbstractPangolins are the most trafficked animals worldwide and are presumed to be restricted to pristine habitats due to poaching intensity in more accessible degraded areas or intrinsic habitat preferences. We tested the hypothesis that pangolins' could persist in degraded areas and near humans if poaching is controlled. We used occurrence records from new and published camera trapping studies from across Southeast Asia to conduct a multiscale analysis of habitat associations for the Critically Endangered Sunda pangolin, encompassing poached and non‐poached areas. Our results were highly influenced by Singapore, where pangolins are common in urban settings and there is minimal poaching. Excluding Singapore, there were no significant landscape‐level habitat associations, reflecting pangolins are habitat generalists. At local scales (including and excluding Singapore), occupancy was negatively correlated with active deforestation but not previously degraded forests. We conclude that with strong antipoaching enforcement, pangolins are unexpectedly adaptable, with Singapore exemplifying the potential for species recovery.
Funder
University of Queensland
Nanyang Technological University
Smithsonian Institution
National Geographic Society
Cited by
4 articles.
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