A new dawn? Population baselines of snow leopards and other mammals of the Kishtwar High Altitude National Park, India

Munib Khanyari , Oyndrila Sanyal , Pankaj Chandan , Deepti Bajaj , Charu Sharma , Manoj Rana , Neeraj Sharma , Tawqir Bashir , Kulbhushansingh Suryawanshi

Integrative Conservation ›› 2024, Vol. 3 ›› Issue (3) : 271 -280.

PDF
Integrative Conservation ›› 2024, Vol. 3 ›› Issue (3) : 271 -280. DOI: 10.1002/inc3.61
RESEARCH ARTICLE

A new dawn? Population baselines of snow leopards and other mammals of the Kishtwar High Altitude National Park, India

Author information +
History +
PDF

Abstract

Accurately assessing the status of threatened species requires reliable population estimates. Despite this necessity, only a small proportion of the global distribution range of the vulnerable snow leopard (Panthera uncia) has been systematically sampled. The Indian section of the Greater Himalayas, which includes Kishtwar High Altitude National Park (KHANP), harbours potential snow leopard habitat. Nevertheless, there has been limited ecological and conservation research focusing on species that are specific to KHANP, as well as limited research on the broader biodiversity of the Greater Himalayas. We used Spatially Explicit Capture-Recapture (SECR) models to provide—to our knowledge—the first robust snow leopard population density and abundance estimates from KHANP. We also provide a Relative Abundance Index (RAI) for non-volant mammals (excluding small rodents). Our study sampled three catchments within the Dachhan region of KHANP—Kibber, Nanth and Kiyar—using 44 cameras over a 45-day period between May and June 2023. We identified four unique snow leopard individuals across 15 detections in nine camera locations. SECR analysis estimated a density of 0.50 snow leopards per 100 km2 (95% confidence interval: 0.13–1.86), corresponding to an abundance of four individual (4–9) adults. Camera trapping revealed a total of 16 mammal species, including the endangered Kashmir musk deer (Moschus cupreus). Marmots (Marmota caudata) had the highest RAI of 21.3 (±0.2). Although the estimated density and abundance of snow leopards in our study area had relatively wide 95% confidence intervals, our combined results of snow leopard densities and RAIs of prey species such as ibex and marmots indicate that KHANP is a potentially important area for snow leopards. Given the geopolitical history of Jammu and Kashmir in India, the region where KHANP is located, wildlife research remains a low priority. We hope our study encourages authorities to support further research. This study is an initial step towards evaluating the potential of KHANP as a conservation landscape under the Government of India's Project Snow Leopard.

Keywords

camera trapping / Himalaya / Kishtwar / mammal / SECR / Snow leopard

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
Munib Khanyari, Oyndrila Sanyal, Pankaj Chandan, Deepti Bajaj, Charu Sharma, Manoj Rana, Neeraj Sharma, Tawqir Bashir, Kulbhushansingh Suryawanshi. A new dawn? Population baselines of snow leopards and other mammals of the Kishtwar High Altitude National Park, India. Integrative Conservation, 2024, 3(3): 271-280 DOI:10.1002/inc3.61

登录浏览全文

4963

注册一个新账户 忘记密码

References

[1]

Asher, M., & Bhandari, P., (2021) Mitigation or myth? Impacts of hydropower development and compensatory afforestation on forest ecosystems in the high Himalayas. Land Use Policy, 100, 105041.

[2]

Bhatnagar, Y.V., Ahmad, R., Kyarong, S.S., Ranjitsinh, M.K., Seth, C.M., Lone, I.A. et al. (2009) Endangered markhor Capra falconeri in India: Through war and insurgency. Oryx, 43(3), 407–411.

[3]

Bull, J.W., Gordon, A., Law, E.A., Suttle, K.B. & Milner-Gulland, E.J. (2014) Importance of baseline specification in evaluating conservation interventions and achieving no net loss of biodiversity. Conservation Biology, 28(3), 799–809.

[4]

Chetri, M., Ale, P.B. & Odden, M., (2024) Camera trapping reveals habitat overlap between snow leopards and common leopards in Gaurishankar Conservation Area, Nepal: Habitat overlap between snow leopards and common leopards in Gaurishankar Conservation Area, Nepal. Snow Leopard Reports, 2.

[5]

Efford, M.G. (2019) Non-circular home ranges and the estimation of population density. Ecology, 100(2), e02580.

[6]

Efford, M.G. (2023) ipsecr: An R package for awkward spatial capture–recapture data. Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 14(5), 1182–1189.

[7]

Efford, M.G., Borchers, D.L. & Byrom, A.E. (2009) Density estimation by spatially explicit capture–recapture: likelihood-based methods. In: Thompson D.L., Cooch E.G. & Conroy M.J. (Eds.) Modeling demographic processes in marked populations. New York: Springer, pp. 255–269.

[8]

Efford, M.G. & Boulanger, J., (2019) Fast evaluation of study designs for spatially explicit capture–recapture. Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 10(9), 1529–1535.

[9]

Efford, M.G., Dawson, D.K., Jhala, Y.V.V. & Qureshi, Q., (2016) Density-dependent home-range size revealed by spatially explicit capture–recapture. Ecography, 39(7), 676–688.

[10]

Efford, M.G. & Fewster, R.M. (2013) Estimating population size by spatially explicit capture–recapture. Oikos, 122(6), 918–928.

[11]

Ghoshal, A., Bhatnagar, Y.V., Pandav, B., Sharma, K., Mishra, C., Raghunath, R. et al. (2019) Assessing changes in distribution of the Endangered snow leopard Panthera uncia and its wild prey over 2 decades in the Indian Himalaya through interview-based occupancy surveys. Oryx, 53(4), 620–632.

[12]

Green, A.M., Chynoweth, M.W. & Şekercioğlu, Ç.H. (2020) Spatially explicit capture-recapture through camera trapping: a review of benchmark analyses for wildlife density estimation. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, 8, 473.

[13]

Hanson, T., Brooks, T.M., Da Fonseca, G.A.B., Hoffmann, M., Lamoreux, J.F., Machlis, G. et al. (2009) Warfare in biodiversity hotspots. Conservation Biology, 23(3), 578–587.

[14]

Jenks, K.E., Chanteap, P., Kanda, D., Peter, C., Cutter, P., Redford, T. et al. (2011) Using relative abundance indices from camera-trapping to test wildlife conservation hypotheses–an example from Khao Yai National Park, Thailand. Tropical Conservation Science, 4(2), 113–131.

[15]

Johansson, Ö., Rauset, G.R., Samelius, G., McCarthy, T., Andrén, H., Tumursukh, L. et al. (2016) Land sharing is essential for snow leopard conservation. Biological Conservation, 203, 1–7.

[16]

Johansson, Ö., Samelius, G., Wikberg, E., Chapron, G., Mishra, C., & Low, M., (2020) Identification errors in camera-trap studies result in systematic population overestimation. Scientific Reports, 10(1), 6393.

[17]

Kachel, S.M., Karimov, K., & Wirsing, A.J. (2022) Predator niche overlap and partitioning and potential interactions in the mountains of Central Asia. Journal of Mammalogy, 103(5), 1019–1029.

[18]

Khanal, G., Mishra, C., & Ramesh Suryawanshi, K., (2020) Relative influence of wild prey and livestock abundance on carnivore-caused livestock predation. Ecology and Evolution, 10(20), 11787–11797.

[19]

Kichloo, M.A., Sharma, K., & Sharma, N., (2023) Climate casualties or human disturbance? Shrinking distribution of the three large carnivores in the Greater Himalaya. Climatic Change, 176(9), 118.

[20]

Kshettry, A., Vaidyanathan, S., & Athreya, V., (2017) Leopard in a tea-cup: a study of leopard habitat-use and human-leopard interactions in north-eastern India. PLoS One, 12(5), e0177013.

[21]

Li, J., McCarthy, T.M., Wang, H., Weckworth, B.V., Schaller, G.B., Mishra, C. et al. (2016) Climate refugia of snow leopards in High Asia. Biological Conservation, 203, 188–196.

[22]

Maheshwari, A., (2020) Ease conflict in Asia with snow leopard peace parks. Science, 367(6483), 1203.

[23]

Maurer, J.M., Schaefer, J.M., Rupper, S., & Corley, A., (2019) Acceleration of ice loss across the Himalayas over the past 40 years. Science Advances, 5(6), eaav7266.

[24]

Mihoub, J.B., Henle, K., Titeux, N., Brotons, L., Brummitt, N.A. & Schmeller, D.S. (2017) Setting temporal baselines for biodiversity: The limits of available monitoring data for capturing the full impact of anthropogenic pressures. Scientific Reports, 7(1), 41591.

[25]

Mishra, C., Samelius, G., Khanyari, M., Srinivas, P.N., Low, M., Esson, C. et al. (2022) Increasing risks for emerging infectious diseases within a rapidly changing high Asia. Ambio, 51(3), 494–507.

[26]

Naqash, R.Y. (2013) Densities and population sizes of large mammals in Kishtwar High Altitude National Park, Jammu and Kashmir, India. Indian Forester, 139(10), 872–878.

[27]

Nawaz, M.A., Valentini, A., Khan, N.K., Miquel, C., Taberlet, P., & Swenson, J.E. (2019) Diet of the brown bear in Himalaya: combining classical and molecular genetic techniques. PLoS One, 14(12), e0225698.

[28]

Niedballa, J., Sollmann, R., Courtiol, A., & Wilting, A., (2016) camtrapR: an R package for efficient camera trap data management. Methods in Ecology and Evolution, 7(12), 1457–1462.

[29]

Nowell, K., Li, J., Paltsyn, M., & Sharma, R.K. (2016). An ounce of prevention: snow leopard crime revisited. Benjamin Franklin.

[30]

O’Brien, T.G., Kinnaird, M.F. & Wibisono, H.T. (2003) Crouching tigers, hidden prey: Sumatran tiger and prey populations in a tropical forest landscape. Animal Conservation Forum, 6(2), 131–139.

[31]

Otis, D.L., Burnham, K.P., White, G.C. & Anderson, D.R. (1978) Statistical inference from capture data on closed animal populations. Wildlife Monographs, 62, 3–135.

[32]

Pal, R., Panwar, A., Goyal, S.P. & Sathyakumar, S., (2022) Changes in ecological conditions may influence intraguild competition: inferring interaction patterns of snow leopard with co-predators. PeerJ, 10, e14277.

[33]

Palencia, P., Rowcliffe, J.M., Vicente, J., & Acevedo, P., (2021) Assessing the camera trap methodologies used to estimate density of unmarked populations. Journal of Applied Ecology, 58(8), 1583–1592.

[34]

Palmero, S., Premier, J., Kramer-Schadt, S., Monterroso, P., & Heurich, M., (2023) Sampling variables and their thresholds for the precise estimation of wild felid population density with camera traps and spatial capture–recapture methods. Mammal Review, 53(4), 223–237.

[35]

Patel, J., Sharma, M., Khanyari, M., Bijoor, A., Mishra, C., & Harihar, A., (2023) Influence of predator suppression and prey availability on carnivore occurrence in western Himalaya. Journal of Zoology.

[36]

PSL. (2008) The Project Snow Leopard. Mew Delhi: Ministry of Environment & Forests, Government of India.

[37]

Rovero, F., Martin, E., Rosa, M., Ahumada, J.A. & Spitale, D., (2014) Estimating species richness and modelling habitat preferences of tropical forest mammals from camera trap data. PLoS One, 9(7), e103300.

[38]

Sanyal, O., Bashir, T., Rana, M., & Chandan, P., (2024) First photographic record of the snow leopard Panthera unciain Kishtwar High Altitude National Park, Jammu and Kashmir, India. Oryx, 1–5.

[39]

Sharma, K., Borchers, D., Mackenzie, D., Durbach, I., Sutherland, C., Nichols, J.D. et al. (2019). Guidelines for estimating snow leopard abundance and distribution using a combination of spatial capture-recapture and occupancy models. Submitted to the Steering Committee of the Global Snow Leopard and Ecosystem Protection Program; with financial support from Global Environment Facility, United Nations Development Program and Snow Leopard Trust.

[40]

Sharma, R.K., Sharma, K., Borchers, D., Bhatnagar, Y.V.V., Suryawanshi, K.R. & Mishra, C., (2021) Spatial variation in population-density of snow leopards in a multiple use landscape in Spiti Valley, Trans-Himalaya. PLoS One, 16(5), e0250900.

[41]

Sollmann, R., Mohamed, A., Samejima, H., & Wilting, A., (2013) Risky business or simple solution–relative abundance indices from camera-trapping. Biological Conservation, 159, 405–412.

[42]

Suryawanshi, K., Reddy, A., Sharma, M., Khanyari, M., Bijoor, A., Rathore, D. et al. (2021) Estimating snow leopard and prey populations at large spatial scales. Ecological Solutions and Evidence, 2(4), e12115.

[43]

Suryawanshi, K.R., Khanyari, M., Sharma, K., Lkhagvajav, P., & Mishra, C., (2019) Sampling bias in snow leopard population estimation studies. Population Ecology, 61(3), 268–276.

[44]

Team, R.C. (2023) R language definition. Vienna, Austria: R foundation for statistical computing, 3(1).

RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS

2024 The Author(s). Integrative Conservation published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden (XTBG).

AI Summary AI Mindmap
PDF

246

Accesses

0

Citation

Detail

Sections
Recommended

AI思维导图

/