Publications by authors named "Egil Droge"

Article Synopsis
  • Caring for newborns limits mammalian females' ability to gather resources, especially during the energy-demanding early lactation period.
  • Different ungulates have developed various strategies for protecting their vulnerable newborns, from staying hidden to being mobile, which can influence their mothers' movement patterns.
  • A study of 54 populations of 23 ungulate species shows that maternal movements are affected by the resource availability and type of neonatal strategy, highlighting the importance of these tactics in understanding how species adapt to environmental changes.
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Prey depletion threatens many carnivore species across the world and can especially threaten low-density subordinate competitors, particularly if subordinates are limited to low densities by their dominant competitors. Understanding the mechanisms that drive responses of carnivore density to prey depletion is not only crucial for conservation but also elucidates the balance between top-down and bottom-up limitations within the large carnivore guild. To avoid predation, competitively subordinate African wild dogs typically avoid their dominant competitors (lions) and the prey rich areas they are associated with, but no prior research has tested whether this pattern persists in ecosystems with anthropogenically-reduced prey density, and reduced lion density as a result.

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Within carnivore guilds, dominant competitors (e.g., lions, ) are limited primarily by the density of prey, while subordinate competitors (e.

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Article Synopsis
  • The 2020 megafires in the Brazilian Pantanal devastated 43% of unburned land, leading to mass wildlife mortality and significant changes in mammal species' habitat use.
  • Of the eight mammal species studied post-fire, six showed declining occupancy, with the giant armadillo suffering the steepest drop, while jaguars experienced increased habitat use and stable density.
  • The findings suggest that megafires negatively impact species distribution and emphasize the need for broader research to understand long-term population trends in affected areas.
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Article Synopsis
  • Predators of similar sizes compete for food in ecosystems where water is scarce, which can lead to more conflicts among them, especially in Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe.
  • The study found that African wild dogs, lions, hyenas, cheetahs, and leopards had overlapping diets, primarily feeding on kudu, and that competition increased in areas with fewer waterholes.
  • To help wild dogs face less competition, the study suggests conserving larger prey species that rely less on water and managing water resources to maintain diversity in habitat availability.
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Wide-ranging carnivores experience tradeoffs between dynamic resource availabilities and heterogeneous risks from humans, with consequences for their ecological function and conservation outcomes. Yet, research investigating these tradeoffs across large carnivore distributions is rare. We assessed how resource availability and anthropogenic risks influence the strength of lion (Panthera leo) responses to disturbance using data from 31 sites across lions' contemporary range.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The text emphasizes the need for better understanding of model selection, particularly the Akaike Information Criterion (AIC), among users in ecological research, as there are common misconceptions about its application.
  • - Two recurring questions among students and colleagues involve the concept of 'pretending' variables and understanding p-values in relation to AIC, which indicate misunderstandings about statistical support in model selection.
  • - The authors aim to enhance statistical practices by using simulations to clarify these concepts and promote effective interpretation and reporting of models that utilize AIC.
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Large herbivore migrations are imperiled globally; however the factors limiting a population across its migratory range are typically poorly understood. Zambia's Greater Liuwa Ecosystem (GLE) contains one of the largest remaining blue wildebeest () migrations, yet the population structure, vital rates, and limiting factors are virtually unknown. We conducted a long-term demographic study of GLE wildebeest from 2012 to 2019 of 107 collared adult females and their calves, 7352 herd observations, 12 aerial population surveys, and concurrent carnivore studies.

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Apex carnivores are wide-ranging, low-density, hard to detect, and declining throughout most of their range, making population monitoring both critical and challenging. Rapid and inexpensive index calibration survey (ICS) methods have been developed to monitor large African carnivores. ICS methods assume constant detection probability and a predictable relationship between the index and the actual population of interest.

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Human activity affecting the welfare of wild vertebrates, widely accepted to be sentient, and therefore deserving of moral concern, is widespread. A variety of motives lead to the killing of individual wild animals. These include to provide food, to protect stock and other human interests, and also for sport.

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Ungulate populations face declines across the globe, and populations are commonly conserved by using protected areas. However, assessing the effectiveness of protected areas in conserving ungulate populations has remained difficult. Using herd size data from four years of line transect surveys and distance sampling models, we modeled population densities of four important herbivore species across a gradient of protection on the edge of Zambia's South Luangwa National Park (SLNP) while accounting for the role of various ecological and anthropogenic variables.

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Allocating resources to growth and reproduction requires grazers to invest time in foraging, but foraging promotes dental senescence and constrains expression of proactive antipredator behaviors such as vigilance. We explored the relationship between carnivore prey selection and prey foraging effort using incisors collected from the kills of coursing and stalking carnivores. We predicted that prey investing less effort in foraging would be killed more frequently by coursers, predators that often exploit physical deficiencies.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study monitored 386 lions in Zambia over eight years to assess the impact of trophy hunting and a subsequent moratorium on their populations and demographics.
  • - Results showed significant improvements in lion survival and abundance during the moratorium, with survival rates increasing for both subadult and adult males and cub survival also positively impacted.
  • - The moratorium led to a notable shift in lion demographics, with an increase in the number of adult males and an overall growth of the lion population, indicating that this approach could effectively support sustainability in lion trophy hunting.
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Both short-term and long-term variation in predation risk can affect the behaviour of prey, thus affecting growth, reproduction, survival and population dynamics. Inferences about the strength of such 'risk effects' in the wild have been limited by a lack of studies that relate antipredator responses to the magnitude of direct predation, measure responses of prey to risk from complete predator guilds, and quantify risk in more than one way. Here, we quantify behavioural responses of a complete ungulate prey guild to long-term and short-term variation in risks from all of the large predators in Liuwa Plain National Park, with known patterns of direct predation.

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Most species adjust their behavior to reduce the likelihood of predation. Many experiments have shown that antipredator responses carry energetic costs that can affect growth, survival, and reproduction, so that the total cost of predation depends on a trade-off between direct predation and risk effects. Despite these patterns, few field studies have examined the relationship between direct predation and the strength of antipredator responses, particularly for complete guilds of predators and prey.

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Within a large carnivore guild, subordinate competitors (African wild dog, , and cheetah, ) might reduce the limiting effects of dominant competitors (lion, , and spotted hyena, ) by avoiding them in space, in time, or through patterns of prey selection. Understanding how these competitors cope with one other can inform strategies for their conservation. We tested how mechanisms of niche partitioning promote coexistence by quantifying patterns of prey selection and the use of space and time by all members of the large carnivore guild within Liuwa Plain National Park in western Zambia.

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While trophy hunting provides revenue for conservation, it must be carefully managed to avoid negative population impacts, particularly for long-lived species with low natural mortality rates. Trophy hunting has had negative effects on lion populations throughout Africa, and the species serves as an important case study to consider the balance of costs and benefits, and to consider the effectiveness of alternative strategies to conserve exploited species. Age-restricted harvesting is widely recommended to mitigate negative effects of lion hunting, but this recommendation was based on a population model parameterized with data from a well-protected and growing lion population.

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Disease transmission within and among wild and domestic carnivores can have significant impacts on populations, particularly for threatened and endangered species. We used serology to evaluate potential exposure to rabies virus, canine distemper virus (CDV), and canine parvovirus (CPV) for populations of African lions (Panthera leo), African wild dogs (Lycaon pictus), and spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta) in Zambia's South Luangwa National Park (SLNP) and Liuwa Plain National Park (LPNP) as well as community lands bordering these areas. In addition, domestic dogs in the study region were evaluated for exposure to CDV and rabies.

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