Abstract
AbstractBackgroundLarge-scale hunting and various anthropogenic pressures in the recent past have pushed the Asiatic caracal (Caracal caracal schmitzi), an elusive medium-sized and locally threatened felid species towards local extinction in India. Though widely distributed historically, it has been sparsely reported from several regions of central and northern states in India till twentieth century. Later, the species distribution became confined only to the states of Rajasthan, Gujarat and Madhya Pradesh, which have had reported sightings in the twenty-first century. In order to highlight the potentially suitable habitats for Asiatic caracals in India, we targeted forth-filtering of the spatial model ensemble by creating and utilizing the validated and spatially thinned species presence information (n = 69) and related ecological variables (aridity, NDVI, precipitation seasonality, temperature seasonality, terrain ruggedness), filtered with anthropological variable (nightlight).ResultsOut of eight spatial prediction models, the two most parsimonious models, Random Forest (AUC 0.91) and MaxEnt (AUC 0.89) were weighted and ensembled. The ensemble model indicated several clustered habitats, covering 1207.83 km2areas in Kachchh (Gujarat), Aravalli mountains (Rajasthan), Malwa plateau (Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh), and Bundelkhand region (Madhya Pradesh) as potentially suitable habitats for caracals. Output probabilities of pixels were further regressed with converted vegetation height data within selected highly potential habitats, i.e., Ranthambore Kuno Landscape (RKL) (suitability ~ 0.44 + 0.03(vegetation height) **,R2= 0.27). The regression model inferred a significant positive relation between vegetation height and habitat suitability, hence the lowest ordinal class out of three classes of converted vegetation height was masked out from the RKL, which yielded in an area of 567 km2as potentially highly suitable habitats for caracals, which can be further proposed as survey areas and conservation priority areas for caracals.ConclusionThe study charts out the small pockets of landscape in and around dryland protected areas, suitable for caracal in the Indian context, which need attention for landscape conservation.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Ecological Modeling,Ecology
Reference104 articles.
1. Adibi MA, Karami M, Kaboli M (2014) Study of seasonal changes in habitat suitability of Caracal caracal schmitzi (Maschie 1812) in the central desert of Iran. J Biodiver Environ Sci 5:95–106
2. Albayrak T, Giannatos G, Kabasakal B (2012) Carnivore and ungulate populations in the Beydaglari Mountains (Anatolia, Turkey): border region between Asia and Europe. Pol J Ecol 60(2):419–428
3. Araújo MB, New M (2007) Ensemble forecasting of species distributions. Trend Ecol Evol 22:42–47. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tree.2006.09.010
4. Ashrafzadeh MR, Khosravi R, Adibi MA, Taktehrani A, Wan HY, Cushman SA (2020) A multi-scale, multi-species approach for assessing effectiveness of habitat and connectivity conservation for endangered felids. Biol Conserv 245:108523. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocon.2020.108523
5. Attri SD, Tyagi A (2010) Climate profile of India, Met monograph No. Environment Meteorology-01
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献