New study
looks at whether a recovering predator is causing another species to decline
Date: August 31, 2018
Source: Wildlife Conservation Society
Summary:
Are
Laikipia's recovering lions turning to endangered Grevy's zebras (Equus grevyi)
for their next meal?
That's
what a team of researchers led by WCS and WWF set out to discover -- whether
the comeback of a top predator -- in this case lions in Laikipa County, Kenya
-- were recovering at the expense of Grevy's zebras, which number only around
2,680 individuals with half of those living in Likipia.
In recent
years, lion numbers have slowly recovered in this region as livestock ranching
-- which commonly practiced shooting or poisoning lions -- has given way to
wildlife tourism. Lions (Panthera leo) are classified as Threatened by IUCN.
Publishing
their results in the journal PLOS ONE, the team used satellite telemetry
to track the movements of both lions and zebras.
The team
found that lions preyed on both Grevy's and plains zebras (Equus quagga) far
less than expected. Their data showed that the population of Grevy's zebra
populations may in fact be stabilizing with recruitment into the population
tripling since 2004.
The
researchers did conclude that competitive displacement by livestock and
interference competition for grass from plains zebras, which are 22 times more
abundant than Grevy's, are most likely the predominant threat to Grevy's
zebras' recovery.
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