Response of small carnivore community to landscape and climatic variability in the Great Himalayan National Park Conservation Area, the Western Himalaya
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Date
2022
Authors
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Publisher
Wildlife Institute of India, Dehradun
Abstract
This study will add knowledge about the elusive and lesser-known small carnivores in a gradient of disturbed and less disturbed habitats.
Objectives
The study focusses on the following objectives:
1) Occurrence and abundance estimation of small carnivores across space and time along the elevation gradient.
2) Assessment of community composition of small carnivores and association with other small carnivore species.
3) Evaluation of landscape sensitivity by representative small carnivore species.
4) Distribution modelling of indicator species to anthropogenic and climatic effects in the current context
Study focusses on the arrangements of small carnivores along the elevation gradient in terms of site intensity usage and abundance of small carnivores. Marked (leopard cat) and unmarked (red fox) species were considered and statistical models were used to find the overall abundance and also across the elevation gradient in space and time. demonstrates the coexistence patterns of small carnivores (red fox and leopard cat) in three dimensions; space, time and diet. The niche dynamics was assessed and compared between low human disturbance and high human disturbance areas. Study reveals how the coexistence patterns of small carnivores change with differential human disturbances.
Description
Keywords
Mammals, Small carnivores, Climate effects, Elevation gradient, Species abundance, Population estimation, Space use, Human disturbance, Habitat alteration, Great Himalayan National Park, Western Himalaya