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Modelación de los Efectos de la Selección de Presas y de la Perturbación Ambiental en una Población Simulada de Leones Africanos
Author(s) -
WHITMAN KARYL L.,
STARFIELD ANTHONY M.,
QUADLING HENLEY,
PACKER CRAIG
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
conservation biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.2
H-Index - 222
eISSN - 1523-1739
pISSN - 0888-8892
DOI - 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2007.00700.x
Subject(s) - trophy , disturbance (geology) , geography , population , population viability analysis , ecology , panthera , predation , endangered species , biology , demography , habitat , paleontology , archaeology , sociology
Tanzania is a premier destination for trophy hunting of African lions (Panthera leo) and is home to the most extensive long‐term study of unhunted lions. Thus, it provides a unique opportunity to apply data from a long‐term field study to a conservation dilemma: How can a trophy‐hunted species whose reproductive success is closely tied to social stability be harvested sustainably? We used an individually based, spatially explicit, stochastic model, parameterized with nearly 40 years of behavioral and demographic data on lions in the Serengeti, to examine the separate effects of trophy selection and environmental disturbance on the viability of a simulated lion population in response to annual harvesting. Female population size was sensitive to the harvesting of young males (≥3 years), whereas hunting represented a relatively trivial threat to population viability when the harvest was restricted to mature males (≥6 years). Overall model performance was robust to environmental disturbance and to errors in age assessment based on nose coloration as an index used to age potential trophies. Introducing an environmental disturbance did not eliminate the capacity to maintain a viable breeding population when harvesting only older males, and initially depleted populations recovered within 15–25 years after the disturbance to levels comparable to hunted populations that did not experience a catastrophic event. These results are consistent with empirical observations of lion resilience to environmental stochasticity .