Population density and ranging behaviour of a generalist carnivore varies with human population

Author:

Alting Brendan F.1ORCID,Pitcher Benjamin J.23ORCID,Rees Matthew W.4ORCID,Ferrer‐Paris José R.1ORCID,Jordan Neil R.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Ecosystem Science, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences University of New South Wales (UNSW) Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. Taronga Institute of Science and Learning, Taronga Conservation Society Dubbo and Sydney New South Wales Australia

3. Faculty of Science and Engineering, School of Natural Sciences Macquarie University Sydney New South Wales Australia

4. Health and Biosecurity Department Commonwealth Science and Industrial Research Organisation Brisbane Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractCanid species are highly adaptable, including to urban and peri‐urban areas, where they can come into close contact with people. Understanding the mechanisms of wild canid population persistence in these areas is key to managing any negative impacts. The resource dispersion hypothesis predicts that animal density increases and home range size decreases as resource concentration increases, and may help to explain how canids are distributed in environments with an urban‐natural gradient. In Australia, dingoes have adapted to human presence, sometimes living in close proximity to towns. Using a targeted camera trap survey and spatial capture‐recapture models, we estimated spatial variation in the population density and detection rates of dingoes on Worimi Country in the Great Lakes region of the NSW coast. We tested whether dingo home range and population densities varied across a gradient of human population density, in a mixed‐use landscape including, urban, peri‐urban, and National Park environs. We found human population density to be a strong driver of dingo density (ranging from 0.025 to 0.433 dingoes/km2 across the natural‐urban gradient), and to have a negative effect on dingo home range size. The spatial scale parameter changed depending on survey period, being smaller in the peak tourism period, when human population increases in the area, than in adjacent survey periods, potentially indicating reduced home range size when additional resources are available. Our study highlights the potential value of managing anthropogenic resource availability to manage carnivore densities and potential risk of human‐carnivore interactions.

Funder

Taronga Conservation Society Australia

Publisher

Wiley

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