Daily satellite location data for leopard management in the North West Province, South Africa, 2014-2020-reference-data

dc.contributor.authorPower, R. John
dc.contributor.authorVenter, Leanne
dc.date.accessioned2021-02-05T17:46:37Z
dc.date.available2021-02-05T17:46:37Z
dc.date.issued2021-02-05
dc.description.abstract(1) Leopards are often translocated away from where they are caught as non-lethal human-wildlife conflict mitigation. It is alleged that leopards fail to settle where they are translocated to, owing to territoriality. We address the need to publish more accounts of successful repatriation of leopards, but also include novel applications aimed at orphans and confiscated leopards. (2) We satellite collared 16 leopards which included a mixture of relocated, and translocated leopards, of which the latter included conventional Damage Causing Animals (DCAs, viz 'problem animals'), orphans and confiscations. We determined standard home- range metrics and assessed home-range stabilisation as a means of determining site fidelity. Premature mortality and site infidelity, i.e homing back to origins, were considered failures. We looked at range stabilisation by examining successive monthly ranges against that of the preceeding month, i.e UDOIs. (3) Relocations turned out to be residents (~3 km, n=3), while they were immune to intervention, while translocations resulted in 50% success (n=12), which were invariably confiscated adults of unknown origin, and simulations of natal dispersals of orphans (~25 km, n =3). DCAs never settled where released (~90 km, n = 5). Resident leopards showed high monthly UDOIs, and for those translocated, a minimum of 0.15 was benchmarked to suggest range stability, which also reflected large spatial ranging. (4) Success in HR establishment was associated with landscapes which were unsaturated by other leopards, but anthropogenic threats still persisted, such that survival after a year was ~45%, but was not different to the normal background mortality of areas outside protected areas in the country. Operations are costly, particularly that to do with veterinary treatment, immobilisation, collars and temporary keeping, but such costs can be carried by public interest groups.
dc.identifier.doidoi:10.5441/001/1.s6r7r28b/2
dc.identifier.urihttps://datarepository.movebank.org/handle/10255/move.1249
dc.relation.ispartofdoi:10.5441/001/1.s6r7r28b
dc.relation.isreferencedbydoi:10.1002/2688-8319.12046
dc.rightsCC0 1.0 Universalen
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
dc.subjectanimal movement
dc.subjectanimal tracking
dc.subjectArgos
dc.subjectconservation biology
dc.subjectleopard
dc.subjectPanthera pardus
dc.subjecturban ecology
dc.titleDaily satellite location data for leopard management in the North West Province, South Africa, 2014-2020-reference-data
dc.typeDataset
dspace.entity.typeData package
dwc.ScientificNamePanthera pardus
mdr.citation.BibTex
@misc{001/1_s6r7r28b/2,
  title = {Daily satellite location data for leopard management in the North West Province, South Africa, 2014-2020-reference-data},
  author = {Power, RJ and Venter, L},
  year = {2021},
  URL = {http://dx.doi.org/10.5441/001/1.s6r7r28b/2},
  doi = {doi:10.5441/001/1.s6r7r28b/2},
  publisher = {Movebank data repository}
}
mdr.citation.CSE
Power RJ, Venter L. 2021. Daily satellite location data for leopard management in the North West Province, South Africa, 2014-2020-reference-data. Movebank Data Repository. https://doi.org/10.5441/001/1.s6r7r28b/2
mdr.citation.RIS
TY  - DATA
ID  - doi:10.5441/001/1.s6r7r28b/2
T1  - Daily satellite location data for leopard management in the North West Province, South Africa, 2014-2020-reference-data
AU  - Power, R. John
AU  - Venter, Leanne
Y1  - 2021/02/05
KW  - animal movement
KW  - animal tracking
KW  - Argos
KW  - conservation biology
KW  - leopard
KW  - Panthera pardus
KW  - urban ecology
KW  - Panthera pardus
PB  - Movebank data repository
UR  - http://dx.doi.org/10.5441/001/1.s6r7r28b/2
DO  - doi:10.5441/001/1.s6r7r28b/2
ER  - 
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