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. 2012;7(2):e32104.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0032104. Epub 2012 Feb 29.

Prey preference of snow leopard (Panthera uncia) in South Gobi, Mongolia

Affiliations

Prey preference of snow leopard (Panthera uncia) in South Gobi, Mongolia

Wasim Shehzad et al. PLoS One. 2012.

Abstract

Accurate information about the diet of large carnivores that are elusive and inhabit inaccessible terrain, is required to properly design conservation strategies. Predation on livestock and retaliatory killing of predators have become serious issues throughout the range of the snow leopard. Several feeding ecology studies of snow leopards have been conducted using classical approaches. These techniques have inherent limitations in their ability to properly identify both snow leopard feces and prey taxa. To examine the frequency of livestock prey and nearly-threatened argali in the diet of the snow leopard, we employed the recently developed DNA-based diet approach to study a snow leopard population located in the Tost Mountains, South Gobi, Mongolia. After DNA was extracted from the feces, a region of ∼100 bp long from mitochondrial 12S rRNA gene was amplified, making use of universal primers for vertebrates and a blocking oligonucleotide specific to snow leopard DNA. The amplicons were then sequenced using a next-generation sequencing platform. We observed a total of five different prey items from 81 fecal samples. Siberian ibex predominated the diet (in 70.4% of the feces), followed by domestic goat (17.3%) and argali sheep (8.6%). The major part of the diet was comprised of large ungulates (in 98.8% of the feces) including wild ungulates (79%) and domestic livestock (19.7%). The findings of the present study will help to understand the feeding ecology of the snow leopard, as well as to address the conservation and management issues pertaining to this wild cat.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: EC, TR and PT are co-inventors of a pending French patent application entitled “Amorces universelles et leurutilisation pour la détection et l'identification d'espèces devertébrés” which has been submitted in France on 26 May 2011. Reference number: FR 11/54606, on the primer pair named 12SV5F and 12SV5R and on the use of the amplified fragment for identifying vertebrate species from environmental samples. This patent only restricts commercial applications and has no impact on the use of this method by academic researchers. This does not alter the authors' adherence to all the PLoS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Relative frequencies of various prey species present in the diet, on the basis of their occurrence in feces of snow leopards from the Tost Mountains, South Gobi, Mongolia.
Figure 2
Figure 2. Location of Tost Mountain study site in South Gobi, Mongolia.

References

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