Dataset: Using dung densities to assess the ecological effectiveness of a protected area network

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Date

2024-03-05

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Zenodo

Abstract

Given recent global endeavors to increase protected area coverage, it is crucial to comprehensively evaluate the efficacy of various area-based conservation strategies in effectively reducing biodiversity loss. Here, we investigated responses of wildlife populations to different protection levels and environmental variables at the landscape scale in the Katavi-Rukwa Ecosystem, western Tanzania. To this end, we conducted line distance sampling surveys and counted dung of six target mammal species (elephant, giraffe, buffalo, zebra, topi, hartebeest) along foot transects within areas differing in protection levels (from strict to less-strictly protected: national park, game reserve, forest reserve, game-controlled area, and unprotected areas). Based on these dung counts, we modelled the spatial distribution of these six mammal species using a species-specific density surface modelling framework. We, found consistent effects of protection level and land-use variables on the spatial distribution of the target mammal species: dung densities were highest in the national park and game reserves, intermediate in less-strictly protected areas and lowest in un-protected areas. Beyond species-specific environmental predictors for dung densities, our results highlight consistent negative associations between dung densities of the target species and distance to cropland and avoidance of areas in proximity to houses. Our findings underpin differences in ecological effectiveness of protected areas within one ecosystem. Protection level and land use play crucial roles in moderating the spatial distribution of all considered mammal species. Our findings suggest that a landscape approach needs to guide effective conservation across the entire protection gradient of the Katavi-Rukwa Ecosystem.

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-15: Life on Land

Keywords

Conservation effectiveness, Biological sciences, Conservation evidence, Distance sampling, Protected and conserved areas

Citation

Giliba, R. A., Kiffner, C., Fust, P., & Loos, J. (2024). Using dung densities to assess the ecological effectiveness of a protected area network [Data set]. Zenod

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