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16 December 2015 Brown hyena habitat selection varies among sites in a semi-arid region of southern Africa
Rebecca J. Welch, Craig J. Tambling, Charlene Bissett, Angela Gaylard, Konrad Müller, Kerry Slater, W. Maartin Strauss, Daniel M. Parker
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Abstract

Human/carnivore conflicts are common across the globe, and with a growing human population, this conflict is likely to increase as the space available to large carnivores is reduced. In South Africa, many small (< 400 km2), fenced protected areas have reintroduced persecuted carnivores, such as brown hyenas (Hyaena brunnea). These reserves have great potential to conserve brown hyena populations; consequently, understanding the limitations that small, fenced reserves impose on space use patterns is needed. We investigated the home range (95% fixed kernel utilization distributions) and landscape determinants of habitat selection using resource selection functions for 10 brown hyenas in 3 separate fenced reserves. Home range sizes were consistently smaller in 2 of the reserves when compared to the third. Considerable variation in the selection of habitat features exists among individual brown hyenas and reserves. The most important landscape determinant driving brown hyena space use was distance to roads, with brown hyenas observed closer to roads when compared to random locations within their ranges. If this relationship with roads holds outside of protected areas, it could represent a considerable threat to the species. Thus, obtaining a better understanding of the influence of roads on brown hyenas represents an important focus for future research.

© 2015 American Society of Mammalogists, www.mammalogy.org
Rebecca J. Welch, Craig J. Tambling, Charlene Bissett, Angela Gaylard, Konrad Müller, Kerry Slater, W. Maartin Strauss, and Daniel M. Parker "Brown hyena habitat selection varies among sites in a semi-arid region of southern Africa," Journal of Mammalogy 97(2), 473-482, (16 December 2015). https://doi.org/10.1093/jmammal/gyv189
Received: 8 May 2015; Accepted: 19 November 2015; Published: 16 December 2015
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