Diet and prey selection of dholes in evergreen and deciduous forests of Southeast Asia

Endangered dholes (Cuon alpinus) are restricted to small and declining populations in Southeast Asia, and little is known about how their ecology differs within the region. We used DNA‐confirmed scats and prey surveys to determine the seasonal diet and prey selection of dholes in 2 different landsca...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kamler, JF, Thatdokkham, K, Rostro-Garcia, S, Bousa, A, Caragiulo, A, Crouthers, R, In, V, Pay, C, Pin, C, Prum, S, Vongkhamheng, C, Johnson, A, Macdonald, D
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020
_version_ 1797059902414258176
author Kamler, JF
Thatdokkham, K
Rostro-Garcia, S
Bousa, A
Caragiulo, A
Crouthers, R
In, V
Pay, C
Pin, C
Prum, S
Vongkhamheng, C
Johnson, A
Macdonald, D
author_facet Kamler, JF
Thatdokkham, K
Rostro-Garcia, S
Bousa, A
Caragiulo, A
Crouthers, R
In, V
Pay, C
Pin, C
Prum, S
Vongkhamheng, C
Johnson, A
Macdonald, D
author_sort Kamler, JF
collection OXFORD
description Endangered dholes (Cuon alpinus) are restricted to small and declining populations in Southeast Asia, and little is known about how their ecology differs within the region. We used DNA‐confirmed scats and prey surveys to determine the seasonal diet and prey selection of dholes in 2 different landscapes that dominate Southeast Asia: closed evergreen forests in hilly terrain in northern Laos, and open deciduous forests in relatively flat terrain in eastern Cambodia. On both sites, muntjac (Muntiacus spp.; 20–28 kg) was the dominant prey item and was selectively consumed over other ungulates in all seasons. Our findings differ from previous conclusions, based largely on studies from India, that the preferred prey weight range of dholes was either 40–60 kg or 130–190 kg. Other important prey were sambar (Rusa unicolor) in Laos, and wild pig (Sus scrofa) and banteng (Bos javanicus) in Cambodia. Seasonal differences in overall diet occurred in Laos, but not Cambodia, primarily because of an increase in livestock consumption. The mean number of dhole scats in group defecation sites was higher in Cambodia (5.9 ± 0.5 [SE]) than Laos (2.4 ± 0.2), suggesting pack sizes were larger in Cambodia. Our results suggest that regardless of land cover type, prey diversity, or pack size, the management of muntjac will be important for conserving dhole populations in Southeast Asia. In Laos, we recommend that local villagers remove livestock from the protected area during the hot‐dry season to reduce livestock predation by dholes.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T20:10:38Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:2a7063e2-f132-40fd-af90-18d4562c4894
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T20:10:38Z
publishDate 2020
publisher Wiley
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:2a7063e2-f132-40fd-af90-18d4562c48942022-03-26T12:25:08ZDiet and prey selection of dholes in evergreen and deciduous forests of Southeast AsiaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:2a7063e2-f132-40fd-af90-18d4562c4894EnglishSymplectic ElementsWiley2020Kamler, JFThatdokkham, KRostro-Garcia, SBousa, ACaragiulo, ACrouthers, RIn, VPay, CPin, CPrum, SVongkhamheng, CJohnson, AMacdonald, DEndangered dholes (Cuon alpinus) are restricted to small and declining populations in Southeast Asia, and little is known about how their ecology differs within the region. We used DNA‐confirmed scats and prey surveys to determine the seasonal diet and prey selection of dholes in 2 different landscapes that dominate Southeast Asia: closed evergreen forests in hilly terrain in northern Laos, and open deciduous forests in relatively flat terrain in eastern Cambodia. On both sites, muntjac (Muntiacus spp.; 20–28 kg) was the dominant prey item and was selectively consumed over other ungulates in all seasons. Our findings differ from previous conclusions, based largely on studies from India, that the preferred prey weight range of dholes was either 40–60 kg or 130–190 kg. Other important prey were sambar (Rusa unicolor) in Laos, and wild pig (Sus scrofa) and banteng (Bos javanicus) in Cambodia. Seasonal differences in overall diet occurred in Laos, but not Cambodia, primarily because of an increase in livestock consumption. The mean number of dhole scats in group defecation sites was higher in Cambodia (5.9 ± 0.5 [SE]) than Laos (2.4 ± 0.2), suggesting pack sizes were larger in Cambodia. Our results suggest that regardless of land cover type, prey diversity, or pack size, the management of muntjac will be important for conserving dhole populations in Southeast Asia. In Laos, we recommend that local villagers remove livestock from the protected area during the hot‐dry season to reduce livestock predation by dholes.
spellingShingle Kamler, JF
Thatdokkham, K
Rostro-Garcia, S
Bousa, A
Caragiulo, A
Crouthers, R
In, V
Pay, C
Pin, C
Prum, S
Vongkhamheng, C
Johnson, A
Macdonald, D
Diet and prey selection of dholes in evergreen and deciduous forests of Southeast Asia
title Diet and prey selection of dholes in evergreen and deciduous forests of Southeast Asia
title_full Diet and prey selection of dholes in evergreen and deciduous forests of Southeast Asia
title_fullStr Diet and prey selection of dholes in evergreen and deciduous forests of Southeast Asia
title_full_unstemmed Diet and prey selection of dholes in evergreen and deciduous forests of Southeast Asia
title_short Diet and prey selection of dholes in evergreen and deciduous forests of Southeast Asia
title_sort diet and prey selection of dholes in evergreen and deciduous forests of southeast asia
work_keys_str_mv AT kamlerjf dietandpreyselectionofdholesinevergreenanddeciduousforestsofsoutheastasia
AT thatdokkhamk dietandpreyselectionofdholesinevergreenanddeciduousforestsofsoutheastasia
AT rostrogarcias dietandpreyselectionofdholesinevergreenanddeciduousforestsofsoutheastasia
AT bousaa dietandpreyselectionofdholesinevergreenanddeciduousforestsofsoutheastasia
AT caragiuloa dietandpreyselectionofdholesinevergreenanddeciduousforestsofsoutheastasia
AT crouthersr dietandpreyselectionofdholesinevergreenanddeciduousforestsofsoutheastasia
AT inv dietandpreyselectionofdholesinevergreenanddeciduousforestsofsoutheastasia
AT payc dietandpreyselectionofdholesinevergreenanddeciduousforestsofsoutheastasia
AT pinc dietandpreyselectionofdholesinevergreenanddeciduousforestsofsoutheastasia
AT prums dietandpreyselectionofdholesinevergreenanddeciduousforestsofsoutheastasia
AT vongkhamhengc dietandpreyselectionofdholesinevergreenanddeciduousforestsofsoutheastasia
AT johnsona dietandpreyselectionofdholesinevergreenanddeciduousforestsofsoutheastasia
AT macdonaldd dietandpreyselectionofdholesinevergreenanddeciduousforestsofsoutheastasia