Did Panthera pardus (Linnaeus, 1758) become extinct in Sumatra because of competition for prey? Modeling interspecific competition within the Late Pleistocene carnivore guild of the Padang Highlands, Sumatra
Authored by Ericson Hoelzchen, Christine Hertler, Rebekka Volmer, Alexia Wurster, Maria Rebecca Ferreras
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.palaeo.2017.08.032
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Abstract
On the Island of Sumatra, the leopard (Panthera pardus) became extinct
during the Late Pleistocene. Several theories exist about the reasons
why leopards could not subsist in Sumatra, while today, national parks
still bear tigers (Panthera tigris) and Asiatic wild dogs (Cuon
alpinus). One often debated theory is that the competition for prey was
the reason for the extinction of leopards in Sumatra. The aim of our
study is to model the impacts of competition for prey in the carnivore
guild of the Padang Highlands in Sumatra to test if competition pressure
was sufficient to force the leopard to extinction. In the first step, we
reconstructed the carnivore guild of the Padang Highlands based on
fossils collected by Dubois in the three cave sites of Sibrambang,
Djamboe and Lida Ajer. In the second step, we developed and applied an
agent-based model based on population density, prey spectrum and daily
meat intake and simulated different scenarios of competition among the
Sumatran predators. We simulated the reconstructed guild and further
tested scenarios with the absence of guild members to see under which
circumstances leopards could have survived in Sumatra. Simulation of the
reconstructed carnivore guild revealed that, in fact, the leopard could
have been driven to extinction by competition from other carnivores.
Excluding one of the competing medium-sized cats or the Asiatic wild dog
leads to the survival of the leopard in our simulations. Interestingly,
our model demonstrates that humans and tigers were not the strongest
competitors for leopards because their exclusion from the scenarios does
not conclude with the survival of leopards in our simulations. According
to our results, the presence of two medium-sized cats and the Asiatic
wild dog, in combination with the small litter size of the leopard, were
the main reasons why the leopard could not tolerate the competition for
prey in the Padang Highlands in Sumatra and thus became extinct in
Sumatra.
Tags
Agent-based model
Body-size
Southeast-asia
Prey mass spectrum
Southeast asia
Panthera tigris
Cuon alpinus
Hunting group-size
African wild dogs
Sea-level changes
Sympatric carnivores
Mammalian carnivores
Landform development
Vegetational change
Western kalimantan