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. 2014 Jun 3;9(6):e98803.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0098803. eCollection 2014.

On a dhole trail: examining ecological and anthropogenic correlates of dhole habitat occupancy in the Western ghats of India

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On a dhole trail: examining ecological and anthropogenic correlates of dhole habitat occupancy in the Western ghats of India

Arjun Srivathsa et al. PLoS One. .

Erratum in

  • PLoS One. 2014;9(8):e106213

Abstract

Although they play a critical role in shaping ecological communities, many threatened predator species are data-deficient. The Dhole Cuon alpinus is one such rare canid with a global population thought to be <2500 wild individuals. We assessed habitat occupancy patterns of dholes in the Western Ghats of Karnataka, India, to understand ecological and anthropogenic determinants of their distribution and habitat-use. We conducted spatially replicated detection/non-detection surveys of dhole signs along forest trails at two appropriate scales: the entire landscape and a single wildlife reserve. Landscape-scale habitat occupancy was assessed across 38,728 km(2) surveying 206 grid cells of 188-km(2) each. Finer scale habitat-use within 935 km2 Bandipur Reserve was studied surveying 92 grid cells of 13-km(2) km each. We analyzed the resulting data of dhole signs using likelihood-based habitat occupancy models. The models explicitly addressed the problematic issue of imperfect detection of dhole signs during field surveys as well as potential spatial auto-correlation between sign detections made on adjacent trail segments. We show that traditional 'presence versus absence' analyses underestimated dhole habitat occupancy by 60% or 8682 km2 [naïve = 0.27; ψL(SE) = 0.68 (0.08)] in the landscape. Addressing imperfect sign detections by estimating detection probabilities [p(t)(L) (SE) = 0.12 (0.11)] was critical for reliable estimation. Similar underestimation occurred while estimating habitat-use probability at reserve-scale [naïve = 0.39; Ψs(SE) = 0.71 (0.06)]. At landscape scale, relative abundance of principal ungulate prey primarily influenced dhole habitat occupancy. Habitat-use within a reserve, however, was predominantly and negatively influenced by anthropogenic disturbance. Our results are the first rigorous assessment of dhole occupancy at multiple spatial scales with potential conservation value. The approach used in this study has potential utility for cost-effectively assessing spatial distribution and habitat-use in other species, landscapes and reserves.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests: Co-author K. Ullas Karanth is a PLOS ONE editorial board member. This does not alter the authors' adherence to PLOS ONE Editorial policies and criteria.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. Study area map of the Western Ghats landscape in Karnataka.
Study area and survey design used for the landscape scale habitat occupancy of dholes in the Western Ghats, Karnataka State, India (2006–2007). The map shows overall forest cover, protected wildlife reserves with superimposition of 188 km2-grid-array. Inset: location of the study area in India.
Figure 2
Figure 2. Study area map of Bandipur Tiger Reserve.
Study area and survey design for Bandipur Tiger Reserve, India (2012) showing protected area boundary, forest road sign-survey routes and 13-km2-grid array. Inset: location of the study area and adjoining protected areas.
Figure 3
Figure 3. Dhole distribution patterns.
Patterns of landscape-scale occupancy: dhole distribution in the Western Ghats of Karnataka, India (2006–2007). (a) Naïve estimate and (b) estimated probabilities of occupancy.
Figure 4
Figure 4. Dhole habitat-use patterns.
Patterns of reserve-scale occupancy: habitat-use by dholes in Bandipur Tiger Reserve, India (2012). (a) Naïve estimate from presence-versus-absence approach and (b) estimated probabilities of occupancy.

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