Photo credit: WCS India |
A new study led by the Wildlife Conservation Society reveals that in
India's human dominated agricultural landscapes, where leopards prowl at night,
it's not livestock that's primarily on the menu -- it is man's best friend.
The study, which looked at scat samples for leopards in India's
Ahmednagar's district in Maharashtra, found that 87 percent of their diet was
made up of domestic animals. Domestic dog dominated as the most common prey
item at 39 percent and domestic cats were second at 15 percent.
Seventeen percent of the leopard's diet consisted of assorted wild
animals including rodents, monkeys, and mongoose, and birds.
Livestock, despite being more abundant, made up a relatively small
portion of the leopard's diet. Domestic goats, for example, are seven times more
common than dogs in this landscape, yet only make up 11 percent of leopard's
prey. The author's say this is because goats are less accessible and often
brought into pens at night, while dogs are largely allowed to wander freely.
Cows, sheep, and pigs were also eaten, but collectively made up less than 20
percent of leopard's food. Most domestic cattle in this region are too large to
be preyed on by leopards.
The authors of the study say that the selection of domestic dogs as
prey means that the economic impact of predation by leopards on valuable
livestock is lower than expected. Thus, human-leopard "conflict" is
more likely to be related to people's fears of leopards foraging in the
proximity of their houses and the sentimental value of dogs as pets.
Study co-author Ullas Karanth, WCS Director for Science-Asia, said:
"During the past two-to-three decades, legal regulation of leopard
hunting, increased conservation awareness, and the rising numbers of feral dogs
as prey have all led to an increase in leopard numbers outside of nature
reserves in agricultural landscapes. While this is good news for conservation
and a tribute to the social tolerance of Indian people, it also poses major
challenges of managing conflict that occasionally breaks out. Only sound
science can help us face this challenge."
Citation
Vidya Athreya, Morten Odden, John D. C. Linnell, Jagdish Krishnaswamy,
K. Ullas Karanth. A cat among the dogs: leopard Panthera pardus diet in a
human-dominated landscape in western Maharashtra, India. Oryx, 2014; 1 DOI:
10.1017/S0030605314000106
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