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Estimation of tiger densities in the tropical dry forests of Panna, Central India, using photographic capture–recapture sampling
Author(s) -
Karanth K. Ullas,
Chundawat Raghunandan S.,
Nichols James D.,
Kumar N. Samba
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
animal conservation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.111
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1469-1795
pISSN - 1367-9430
DOI - 10.1017/s1367943004001477
Subject(s) - tiger , camera trap , panthera , sampling (signal processing) , geography , mark and recapture , population , dry season , deciduous , habitat , distance sampling , population density , abundance (ecology) , ecology , forestry , environmental science , predation , biology , cartography , physics , mathematics , demography , algorithm , sociology , detector , optics
Tropical dry‐deciduous forests comprise more than 45% of the tiger ( Panthera tigris ) habitat in India. However, in the absence of rigorously derived estimates of ecological densities of tigers in dry forests, critical baseline data for managing tiger populations are lacking. In this study tiger densities were estimated using photographic capture–recapture sampling in the dry forests of Panna Tiger Reserve in Central India. Over a 45‐day survey period, 60 camera trap sites were sampled in a well‐protected part of the 542‐km 2 reserve during 2002. A total sampling effort of 914 camera‐trap‐days yielded photo‐captures of 11 individual tigers over 15 sampling occasions that effectively covered a 418‐km 2 area. The closed capture–recapture model M h , which incorporates individual heterogeneity in capture probabilities, fitted these photographic capture history data well. The estimated capture probability/sample, p̂ = 0.04, resulted in an estimated tiger population size and standard error ( N̂ ( SÊN̂ )) of 29 (9.65), and a density ( D̂ ( SÊD̂ )) of 6.94 (3.23) tigers/100 km 2 . The estimated tiger density matched predictions based on prey abundance. Our results suggest that, if managed appropriately, the available dry forest habitat in India has the potential to support a population size of about 9000 wild tigers.

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