Habitat loss and fragmentation are the leading causes of species range contraction and extirpation, worldwide. Factors that predict sensitivity to fragmentation include high trophic level, large body size, and extensive spatial requirements. Pumas () exemplify these qualities, making them particularly susceptible to fragmentation and subsequent reductions in demographic connectivity. The chaparral-dominated ecosystems surrounding the greater San Francisco Bay Area encompass over 10,000 km of suitable puma habitat, but inland waterways, croplands, urban land uses, and extensive transportation infrastructure have resulted in widespread habitat fragmentation. Pumas in this region now exist as a metapopulation marked by loss of genetic diversity, collisions with vehicles, and extensive human-puma conflict. Given these trends, we conducted a photo survey from 2017 to 2021 across 19 patches of predicted habitat and compiled a dataset of >6584 puma images. We used a logistic regression analytical framework to evaluate the hypothesis that puma patch occupancy would exhibit a threshold response explained by patch size, isolation, and habitat quality. Contrary to predictions, only variables related to patch size demonstrated any power to explain occupancy. On average, occupied patches were 18× larger than those where they were not detected (825 ± 1238 vs. 46 ± 101 km). Although we observed pumas in patches as small as 1 km, logistic regression models indicated a threshold occupancy probability between 300 and 400 km, which is remarkably close to the mean male puma home range size in coastal California (~381 km). Puma populations dependent on habitats below this value may be susceptible to inbreeding depression and human-wildlife conflict, and therefore vulnerable to extirpation. For species conservation, we suggest conflicts might be ameliorated by identifying the largest, isolated patches for public education campaigns with respect to management of domestic animals, and remaining connective parcels be identified, mapped, and prioritized for targeted mitigation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.10381 | DOI Listing |
Autophagy
October 2024
Research Center for Environment and Female Reproductive Health, the Eighth Affiliated Hospital, Sun Yat-sen University, Shenzhen, Guangdong, China.
Int Urol Nephrol
September 2024
Department of CSE, PDA College of Engineering Gulbarga, Kalaburagi, Karnataka, 585105, India.
In clinical decision-making for chronic disorders like chronic kidney disease, high variability often leads to uncertainty and negative outcomes. Deep learning techniques have been developed as useful tools for minimizing the chance and improving clinical decision-making. Moreover, traditional techniques for chronic kidney disease recognition frequently the accuracy is compromised as it relies on limited sets of biological attributes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Evol
August 2023
Felidae Conservation Fund Mill Valley California USA.
Habitat loss and fragmentation are the leading causes of species range contraction and extirpation, worldwide. Factors that predict sensitivity to fragmentation include high trophic level, large body size, and extensive spatial requirements. Pumas () exemplify these qualities, making them particularly susceptible to fragmentation and subsequent reductions in demographic connectivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcol Appl
January 2022
Centro de Investigación de Puerto Deseado, Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia Austral, CONICET, Avenida Prefectura Naval s/n, 9050, Puerto Deseado, Santa Cruz, Argentina.
Apex predators drive top-down effects in ecosystems and the loss of such species can trigger mesopredator release. This ecological process has been well documented in human-modified small areas, but for management and conservation of ecological communities, it is important to know which human factors affect apex predator occurrence and which mediate mesopredators release at large scales. We hypothesized that mesopredators would avoid spatial and temporal overlap with the apex predator, the puma; but that human perturbations (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Anim Ecol
May 2018
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada.
In Focus: Blecha, K. A., Boone, R.
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