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Wednesday, March 27, 2013
New paper: clouded leopard & prey activity patterns
6:28 PM | Posted by
Andy Hearn |
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Sunda clouded leopards terrestrial activity was shown to be mainly nocturnal |
On the menu. A samba deer calf may be an important component of Sunda clouded leopard's diet |
At long last we are beginning to churn through the mountain
of camera trapping data we have been accumulating over the last few years and to
turn it into conservation science. Our most recent paper, available from here,
explores the terrestrial activity patterns of the Sunda clouded leopard and
those of their potential ungulate prey.
I say potential, because at this stage we really don’t know
what these cats are eating – in fact, we know almost nothing about even the basic ecology of these elusive felids. We have a number of anecdotes and sightings
of clouded leopards attacking this species, and eating that, which tend to
suggest that the clouded leopard has a very varied diet, feasting on a diverse
array of mammals from monkeys to muntjacs. But we really don’t have a good
handle on what constitutes the most important prey.
Ultimately, the only way to answer this important question is to collect scat, and poke around to quantitatively assess prey composition – and this is something we are attempting to do right now. Another, indirect approach is to explore overlaps in activity between the predator and their prey – by making use of camera trap data. We might expect predator activity to be often in phase with the periods when those potential prey species are most vulnerable to their method of predation. For some predators, this may result in their activity patterns mirroring those of their prey, as has been shown in several felid-prey systems, but this may not always be the case.
Ultimately, the only way to answer this important question is to collect scat, and poke around to quantitatively assess prey composition – and this is something we are attempting to do right now. Another, indirect approach is to explore overlaps in activity between the predator and their prey – by making use of camera trap data. We might expect predator activity to be often in phase with the periods when those potential prey species are most vulnerable to their method of predation. For some predators, this may result in their activity patterns mirroring those of their prey, as has been shown in several felid-prey systems, but this may not always be the case.
Saving their bacon? Bearded pigs were shown to have a more diurnal activity pattern when clouded leopard were present - evidence of avoidance? |
With this in mind we catalogued the tens of thousands of
images for clouded leopard and prey from across our forest study sites, and
used some clever wizardry to construct models of each species’ activity patterns.
So what did we find? Firstly, Sunda clouded leopard’s terrestrial activity was
found to be primarily nocturnal, although crepuscular peaks and some diurnal
activity was also evident. We found that
of six potential ungulate prey species, Sunda clouded leopards' activity
patterns overlapped most closely with those of sambar deer and greater mouse
deer.
Interestingly, we also found that in one of our forest areas
where clouded leopard were apparently absent, bearded pigs showed a greater level
of nocturnal activity, whe compared to pig populations living alongside the predatory
felid. This finding suggests that bearded pigs may be prey species for clouded
leopards and they are capable of altering their activity pattern in response to
this risk.
Labels:
activity pattern,
bearded pig,
camera traps,
clouded leopard,
sabah,
samba deer,
sunda clouded leopard
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1 comments:
i have got a great relief from barking of dogs since I started to use the dog whistle app