Modeling the impacts of hunting on the population dynamics of red howler monkeys (Alouatta seniculus)
Authored by Eduardo Fernandez-Duque, Ruscena Wiederholt, Duane R Diefenbach, Rasanayagam Rudran
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2010.06.026
Sponsors:
Smithsonian Institution
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
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Abstract
Overexploitation of wildlife populations occurs across the humid tropics
and is a significant threat to the long-term survival of large-bodied
primates. To investigate the impacts of hunting on primates and ways to
mitigate them, we developed a spatially explicit, individual-based model
for a landscape that included hunted and un-hunted areas. We used the
large-bodied neotropical red howler monkey (Alouatta seniculus) as our
case study species because its life history characteristics make it
vulnerable to hunting. We modeled the influence of different rates of
harvest and proportions of landscape dedicated to un-hunted reserves on
population persistence, population size, social dynamics, and hunting
yields of red howler monkeys. In most scenarios, the un-hunted
populations maintained a constant density regardless of hunting pressure
elsewhere, and allowed the overall population to persist. Therefore, the
overall population was quite resilient to extinction; only in scenarios
without any un-hunted areas did the population go extinct. However, the
total and hunted populations did experience large declines over 100
years under moderate and high hunting pressure. In addition, when
reserve area decreased, population losses and losses per unit area
increased disproportionately. Furthermore, hunting disrupted the social
structure of troops. The number of male turnovers and infanticides
increased in hunted populations, while birth rates decreased and
exacerbated population losses due to hunting. Finally, our results
indicated that when more than 55\% of the landscape was harvested at
high (30\%) rates, hunting yields, as measured by kilograms of biomass, were less than those obtained from moderate harvest rates. Additionally, hunting yields, expressed as the number of individuals
hunted/year/km(2), increased in proximity to un-hunted areas, and
suggested that dispersal from un-hunted areas may have contributed to
hunting sustainability. These results indicate that un-hunted areas
serve to enhance hunting yields, population size, and population
persistence in hunted landscapes. Therefore, spatial regulation of
hunting via a reserve system may be an effective management strategy for
sustainable hunting, and we recommend it because it may also be more
feasible to implement than harvest quotas or restrictions on season
length. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Habitat fragmentation
Conservation
Seed dispersal
Rain-forest
French-guiana
Vertebrates
Tropical forests
Localized management
Primate
communities
African lions