Implications of Ecological Drivers on Roan Antelope Populations in Mokala National Park, South Africa

Author:

Maruping-Mzileni Nkabeng Thato1,Bezuidenhout Hugo2,Ferreira Sam3ORCID,Ramoelo Abel4ORCID,Mapuru Morena1ORCID,Munyai Lufuno1,Erusan Roxanne1

Affiliation:

1. Scientific Services, Conservation Services Division, SANParks, 110040, Hadison Park, Kimberley 8306, South Africa

2. Applied Behavioural Ecology and Ecosystem Research Unit, UNISA, Private Bag X6, Florida 1717, South Africa

3. Department of Nature Conservation and Marine Science, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 652, Cape Town 8000, South Africa

4. Centre for Environmental Studies, Department of Geography, Geoinformatics and Meteorology, University of Pretoria, Private Bag x20, Hatfield 0028, South Africa

Abstract

Climate change has massive global impacts and affects a wide range of species. Threatened species such as the roan antelope (Hippotragus equinus) are particularly vulnerable to these changes because of their ecological requirements. Attempts to address concerns about the roan’s vulnerability have not been well documented in South African protected areas. This study identifies the landscape use and distribution of the roan as well as habitat and forage suitability changes to help inform management decisions for the conservation of roan. We used fine- and broad-scale data from Mokala National Park, South Africa that includes roan occurrence data, vegetation condition indices, vegetation (structure and plant species composition), elevation and temperature differences, and precipitation strata to construct a suitability framework using the Maximum Entropy (Maxent) and Random Forest statistical package. In Mokala National Park, roan occurred in the Schmidtia pappophoroides–Vachellia erioloba sparse woodland, Senegalia mellifera–Vachellia erioloba closed woodland, Senegalia mellifera–Vachellia tortilis open shrubland, Vachellia erioloba–V. tortilis closed woodland and Rhigozum obovatum–Senegalia mellifera open shrubland. The veld (vegetation) condition index (VCI) improved from 2019 (VCI < 50%) to 2021 (VCI > 60%), with the proportion of palatable grass species (Schmidtia pappophoroides and Eragrostis lehmanniana) also increasing. This study identified four key climatic conditions affecting roan distribution, namely annual mean daily temperature range, temperature seasonality, minimum temperatures of the coldest month, and precipitation of the wettest month. These results suggest that the conservation of roan antelope should consider these key variables that affect their survival in preferred habitats and foraging areas in anticipation of changing ecological conditions.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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