Abstract
Small, enclosed reserves are now common across Africa, and their conservation importance as wildlife refuges is increasingly acknowledged. Whilst such reserves represent areas safe from human persecution, they can also become threats themselves when the natural processes of emigration and immigration are prohibited. As a result, wildlife populations residing in enclosed reserves require careful management to safeguard their long-term persistence. As successful conservation management relies on precise population estimates, we estimated brown hyena density within a 180-km2 enclosed reserve in north-central Namibia. Using camera trapping methods in combination with spatially explicit capture-recapture (SECR) models, brown hyena density was estimated at 24.01 brown hyenas/100 km2 (± 3.47, 95% CI’s 18.12–31.81), the highest recorded to date for the species. The high density is attributed to the relatively high density of leopard within the reserve, which may facilitate brown hyenas by providing access to the large herbivore biomass through kleptoparasitism, coupled with protection from human persecution. Results highlight the potential for enclosed reserves to host high-density populations of a persecuted large carnivore and show that, despite their often small size, such systems can aid conservation efforts. However, such results suggest reserve managers will be increasingly faced with the dilemma of dealing with surplus individuals when populations exceed carrying capacity. Therefore, the development of methods estimating carrying capacity for scavenging species, along with creating meta-population management schemes for all large carnivore species are essential next steps for conservation in Africa.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Akaike H (1973) Information theory and an extension of the maximum likelihood principle. In: Petrov BN, Csaki F (eds) Proceedings of the second international symposium on information theory. Akademiai Kidaos, Budapest, pp 199–213
Balme GA, Batchelor A, De Woronin Britz N, Seymour G, Grover M, Hes L, Macdonald DW, Hunter LTB (2012) Reproductive success of female leopards Panthera pardus: the importance of top-down processes. Mammal Rev 43:221–237
Bertschinger HJ, De Barros DE, Vaz Guimaraes MA, Trigg TE, Human A (2008) The use of deslorelin implants for long-term contraception of lionesses and tigers. Wildl Res 35:525–530
Borchers DL, Efford MG (2008) Spatially explicit maximum likelihood methods for capture-recapture studies. Biometrics 64:377–385. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1541-0420.2007.00927
Bradley EH, Pletscher DH, Bangs EE, Kunkel KE, Smith DW, Mack MC, Meier TJ, Fontaine JA, Niemeyer CC, Jimenez MD (2005) Evaluating wolf translocation as a nonlethal method to reduce livestock conflicts in the Northwestern United States. Conserv Biol 9:1498–1508
Caro T (2000) Controversy over behaviour and genetics in cheetah conservation. In: Gosling LM, Sutherland WJ (eds) Behaviour and conservation. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp 221–237
Caughley G (1994) Directions in conservation biology. J Anim Ecol 63:215–244
Chipman R, Slate D, Rupprecht C, Mendoza M (2008) Downside risk of wildlife translocation. Dev Biol 131:223–232
Creel S, Becker MS, Durant SM, M’Soka J, Matandiko W, Dickman AJ, Christianson D, Droge E, Mweetaw T, Pettorelli N, Rosenblatt E, Schuette P, Woodroffe R, Bashir S, Beudels-Jamar RC, Blake S, Borner M, Breitenmoser C, Broekhuis F, Cozzi G, Davenport TRB, Deutsch J, Dollar L, Dolrenry S, Douglas-Hamilton I, Fitzherbert E, Foley C, Hazzah L, Heschel P, Hilborn R, Hopcraft JGC, Ikanda D, Jacobson A, Joubert B, Joubert D, Kelly MS, Lichtenfeld L, Mace GM, Milanzi J, Mitchell N, Msuha M, Muir R, Nyahongo J, Pimm S, Purchase G, Schenck C, Sillero-Zubiri C, Sinclair ARE, Songorwa AN, Stanley-Price M, Tehou CA, Trout C, Wall J, Wittenmyer G, Zimmerman A (2013) Conserving large populations of lions - the argument for fences has holes. Ecol Lett 16:1413–1416
Davies-Mostert HT, Mills MGL, Macdonald DW (2009) A critical assessment of South Africa’s managed metapopulation recovery strategy for African wild dogs and its value as a template for large carnivore conservation elsewhere. In: Hayward MW, Somers MJ (eds) Reintroduction of top-order predators. Blackwell, Oxford, pp 10–42
Efford M (2012) SECR: spatially explicit capture-recapture models. R package; version 2.10.4. Available from: http:// http://cran.r-project.org/package=secr. Accessed January 2017
Estes RD, Atwood JL, Estes AB (2006) Downwards trends in Ngorongoro Crater ungulate population 1986-2005: conservation concerns and the need for ecological research. Biol Conserv 131:1022–1033
Ferreira SM, Hofmeyr M (2014) Managing charismatic carnivores in small areas: large felids in South Africa. S Afr J Wildl Res 44:32–42
Fonturbel FE, Simonetti JA (2011) Translocation and human-carnivore conflicts: problem solving or problem creating? Wildl Biol 17:217–224
Fuller TK, Sievert PR (2001) Carnivore demography and the consequences of changes in prey availability. In: Gittleman JL, Funk SM, Macdonald D, Wayne RK (eds) Carnivore conservation. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp 163–178
Hayward M, Kerley GIH (2009) Fencing for conservation: restriction of evolutionary potential or a riposte to threatening processes? Biol Conserv 142:1–13
Hayward MW, Andendorff J, O’Brien J, Sholto-Douglas A, Bissett C, Moolman LC, Bean P, Fogarty A, Howarth D, Slater R, Kerley GIH (2007a) The reintroduction of large carnivores to the Eastern Cape, South Africa: an assessment. Oryx 41:205–214
Hayward MW, O’Brien J, Kerley GIH (2007b) Carrying capacity of large African predators: predictions and tests. Biol Conserv 139:219–229
James R (2014) The population dynamics of the black-backed jackal (Canis mesomelas) in game farm ecosystems of South Africa. PhD thesis, University of Brighton, United Kingdom
Jordan MJ, Barrett RH, Purcell KL (2011) Camera trapping estimates of density and survival of fishers Martes pennanti. Wildl Biol 17:266–276
Karanth KU, Nichols JD (1998) Estimating tiger densities in India from camera trap data using photographic captures and recaptures. Ecology 79:2852–2862
Kent VT, Hill RA (2013) The importance of farmland for the conservation of the brown hyaena Parahyaena brunnea. Oryx 47:431–440
Kidney D, Rawson BM, Borchers DL, Steveson BC, Marques TA, Thomas L (2016) An efficient acoustic density estimation method with human detectors applied to gibbons in Cambodia. PLoS One 11:e0155066
Kock RA, Woodford MH, Rossiter P (2010) Disease risks associated with the translocation of wildlife. Rev Sci Tech 29:329–350
Lindsey PA, Alexander RR, Mills MGL, Romanch S, Woodroffe R (2007) Wildlife viewing preferences of visitors to protected areas in South Africa: implications for the role of ecotourism in conservation. J Ecotour 6:19–33
Marnewick K (2015) Conservation biology of cheetahs Acinonyx jubatus (Schreber, 1775) and African wild dogs Lycaon pictus (Temmick, 1820) in South Africa. PhD Thesis, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa
Massey AL, King AA, Foufopoulos J (2014) Fencing protected areas: a long-term assessment of the effects of reserve establishment and fencing on African mammalian diversity. Biol Conserv 176:162–171
Maude G (2005) The comparative ecology of the brown hyaena (Hyaena brunnea) in the Makgadikgadi National Park and a neighbouring community cattle area in Botswana. PhD thesis. University of Pretoria
Miller S, Bissett C, Burger A, Courtenay B, Dickerson T, Druce DJ, Ferreira S, Funston PJ, Hofmeyr D, Kilian PJ, Matthews W, Naylor S, Parker DM, Slotow R, Toft M, Zimmermann D (2013) Management of reintroduced lions in small, fenced reserves in South Africa: an assessment and guidelines. S Afr J Wildl Res 43:138–154
Mills MGL (1982) Factors affecting group size and territory size of the brown hyaena, Hyaena brunnea in the southern Kalahari. J Zool 198:39–51
Mills MGL (1984) The comparative behavioural ecology of the brown hyena Hyaena brunnea and the spotted hyena Crocuta crocuta in the southern Kalahari. Koedoe 27:234–247
Mills MGL (1990) Kalahari hyaenas: the comparative behavioural ecology of two species. Allen and Unwin, London
Mills MGL, Hofer H (compilers)(1998) Hyaenas: status survey and conservation action plan. IUCN/SSC Hyaena Specialist Group. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland, and Cambridge, United Kingdom
Mills MGL, Mills MEJ (1982) Factors affecting movement patterns of brown hyaenas, Hyaena brunnea, in the southern Kalahari. J Wildl Res 198:111–117
Otis DL, Burnham KP, White GC, Anderson DR (1978) Statistical inference from capture data on closed animal populations. Wildl Monogr 62:1–135
Packer C, Loveridge A, Canney S, Caro T, Garnett ST, Pfeifer M, Zander KK, Swanson A, Macnulty D, Balme G, Bauer H, Begg CM, Begg KS, Bhalla S, Bissett C, Bodasing T, Brink H, Burger A, Burton AC, Clegg B, Dell S, Delsink A, Dickerson T, Dlonial SM, Druce D, Frank L, Funston P, Gichohi N, Groom R, Hanekom C, Heath B, Hunter L, Deiongh HH, Joubert CJ, Kasiki SM, Kissui B, Knocker W, Leathern B, Lindsey PA, Maclennan SD, McNutt JW, Miller SM, Naylor S, Nel P, Ng’weno C, Nicholls K, Ogutu JO, Okot-Omova E, Patterson BD, Plumptre A, Salerno J, Skinner K, Slotow R, Sogbohossou EA, Stratford KJ, Winterbach C, Winterbach H, Polasky S (2013) Conserving large carnivores: dollars and fence. Ecol Lett 16:635–641
R Development Core Team (2014) R: a language and environment for statistical computing; Version 3.1.1. R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna
Royle JA, Chandler RB, Sollmann R, Gardner B (2014) Spatial capture-recapture. Elsevier, United Kingdom
Saout S, Hoffmann M, Shi Y, Hughes A, Bernard C, Brooks TM, Bertzky B, Butchart SHM, Badman T, Rodrigues ASL (2013) Protected areas and effective biodiversity conservation. Science 342:803–805
Slotow R, Whyte I, Hofmeyr M, Kerley GHI, Conway T, Scholes RJ (2008) Lethal management of elephant. In: Scholes RJ, Mennell KG (eds) Assessment of South African elephant management. Witswaterand University Press, Johannesburg, pp 370–405
Smith DW (2006) Re-introduction of gray wolves to Yellowstone National Park, USA. Re-introduction News 25:29–31
Sollmann R, Furtado MM, Gardner B, Hofer H, Jácomo ATA, Tôrres NM, Silveira L (2011) Improving density estimates for elusive carnivores: accounting for sex-specific detection and movements using spatial capture-recapture models for jaguars in Central Brazil. Biol Conserv 144:1017–1024
Stander PE, Llau K, Lui N, Dabe T, Dabe D (1997) Non-consumptive utilization of leopards: community conservation and ecotourism in practice. In: Penzhorn BI (ed) Proceedings of a symposium on lions and leopards as game ranch animals. South African Veterinary Association Wildlife Group, Onderstepoort, pp 810–817
Stein AB, Fuller TK, Destefano S, Marker LL (2011) Leopard population and home range estimates in north-central Namibia. Afr J Ecol 49:383–387
Tambling CJ, du Toit JT (2005) Modelling wildebeest population dynamics: implications of predation and harvesting in a closed system. J Appl Ecol 42:431–441
Thorn M, Scott DM, Green M, Bateman PW, Cameron EZ (2009) Estimating brown hyaena occupancy using baited camera traps. S Afr J Wildl Res 39:1–10
Thorn M, Green M, Bateman PW, Waite S, Scott DM (2011) Brown hyaenas on roads: estimating carnivore occupancy and abundance using spatially auto-correlated sign survey replicates. Biol Conserv 144:1799–1807
Trinkel M, Funston P, Hofmeyr M, Hofmeyr D, Dell S, Packer C, Slotow R (2010) Inbreeding and density-dependent population growth in small, isolated lion populations. Anim Conserv 13:374–382
Watts HE, Holekamp KE (2009) Ecological determinants of survival and reproduction in the spotted hyena. J Mammal 90:461–471
Weise FJ, Wiesel I, Lemeris J Jr, van Vuuren RJ (2015) Evaluation of a conflict-related brown hyaena translocation in central Namibia. Afr J Wildl Res 45:178–186
Welch RJ, Parker DM (2016) Brown hyaena population explosion: rapid population growth in a small, fenced system. Wildl Res 43:178–187
Welch RJ, Tambling CJ, Bissett C, Gaylard A, Muller K, Slater K, Strauss WM, Parker DM (2015) Brown hyena habitat selection varies among sites in a semi-arid region of southern Africa. J Mammal 97:473–482
Westbury MV, Hartmann S, Barlow A, Wiesel I, Leo V, Welch R, Parker DM, Sicks F, Ludwig A, Dalen L, Hofreiter M (2018) Extended and continuous decline in effective population size results in low genomic diversity in the world’s rarest hyena species, the brown hyena. Mol Biol Evol 35:1225–1237
Wiesel I (2015) Parahyaena brunnea. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2015. E.T10276A82344448. https://doi.org/10.2305/IUCN.UK.2015-4.RLTS.T10276A82344448.en. https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/10276/82344448#assessment-information Accessed 1 Sept 2016
Winterbach CW, Maude G, Neo-Mahupeleng G, Klein R, Boast L, Rich LN, Somers M (2017) Conservation implications of brown hyaena (Parahyaena brunnea) population densities and distribution across landscapes in Botswana. Koedoe 59:1–16
Yarnell RW, Phipps WL, Burgess LP, Ellis JA, Harrison SWR, Dell S, MacTavish D, MacTavish LM, Scott DM (2013) The influence of large predators on the feeding ecology of two African mesocarnivores: the black-backed jackal and the brown hyaena. S Afr J Wildl Res 43:155–166
Yiu SW, Parrini F, Karczmarski L, Keith M (2017) Home range establishment and utilization by reintroduced lions (Panthera leo) in a small South African wildlife reserve. Integr Zool 12:318–332
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the Namibian Wildlife Conservation Trust for providing funding for the camera traps used for this study. We also thank Varta Consumer Batteries Namibia, AfriCat UK and the Okonjima Lodge CC for their support. The study was conducted under the National Commission on Research, Science and Technology permit RCIV00032017. Thank you to Ruben Portas for providing comments on the manuscript. The comments of two anonymous reviewers improved the quality of this manuscript.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Additional information
Communicated by: Marietjie Landman
Publisher’s note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Edwards, S., Noack, J., Heyns, L. et al. Evidence of a high-density brown hyena population within an enclosed reserve: the role of fenced systems in conservation. Mamm Res 64, 519–527 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s13364-019-00432-7
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13364-019-00432-7