Table_1_Wild Predators, Livestock, and Free Ranging Dogs: Patterns of Livestock Mortality and Attitudes of People Toward Predators in an Urbanizing Trans-Himalayan Landscape.DOCX

Livestock depredation by large carnivores is a significant source of conflicts over predators and an important conservation and economic concern. Preventing livestock loss to wild predators is a substantial focus of human-carnivore conflict mitigation programs. A key assumption of the preventive str...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Meenal Pahuja (11842322), Rishi Kumar Sharma (10825891)
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3389/fcosc.2021.767650.s001
id ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/17210132
record_format openpolar
spelling ftsmithonian:oai:figshare.com:article/17210132 2023-05-15T15:49:53+02:00 Table_1_Wild Predators, Livestock, and Free Ranging Dogs: Patterns of Livestock Mortality and Attitudes of People Toward Predators in an Urbanizing Trans-Himalayan Landscape.DOCX Meenal Pahuja (11842322) Rishi Kumar Sharma (10825891) 2021-12-16T04:22:49Z https://doi.org/10.3389/fcosc.2021.767650.s001 unknown https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_Wild_Predators_Livestock_and_Free_Ranging_Dogs_Patterns_of_Livestock_Mortality_and_Attitudes_of_People_Toward_Predators_in_an_Urbanizing_Trans-Himalayan_Landscape_DOCX/17210132 doi:10.3389/fcosc.2021.767650.s001 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Conservation and Biodiversity Biological Adaptation Speciation and Extinction Animal Behaviour Global Change Biology Canis lupus human-wildlife relationships human-wildlife conflict (HWC) livestock depredation multiple use landscapes Panthera uncia pastoralism urban wildlife Dataset 2021 ftsmithonian https://doi.org/10.3389/fcosc.2021.767650.s001 2021-12-19T19:23:47Z Livestock depredation by large carnivores is a significant source of conflicts over predators and an important conservation and economic concern. Preventing livestock loss to wild predators is a substantial focus of human-carnivore conflict mitigation programs. A key assumption of the preventive strategy is reduction in the livestock losses leading to a positive shift in the attitudes toward predators. Therefore, it is important to quantify the true extent of livestock mortality caused by wild predators and its influence on attitudes of the affected communities. We examined seasonal and spatial patterns of livestock mortality and factors influencing people's attitudes toward wild predators i.e., snow leopards (Panthera uncia) and wolves (Canis lupus chanco) and free-ranging dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) in a Trans-Himalayan urbanizing landscape in India. We used systematic sampling to select the survey households and implemented a semi-structured questionnaire to respondents. The sampled villages (n = 16) represent a mosaic of urban and agricultural ecosystems within a radius of 40 km of Leh town. In 2016–2017, 93% of the sampled households lost livestock to predators, accounting for 0.93 animals per household per year. However, of the total events of livestock mortality, 33% were because of weather/natural events, 24% by snow leopards, 20% because of disease, 15% because of free-ranging dogs and 9% because of wolves. The annual economic loss per household because of livestock mortality was USD 371, a substantial loss given the average per capita income of USD 270 in the region. Of the total loss, weather/natural events caused highest loss of USD 131 (35%), followed by snow leopards USD 91 (25%), disease USD 87 (24%), free ranging dogs USD 48 (13%), and wolves USD 14 (4%). Despite losing a considerable proportion of livestock (33 %) to wild predators, respondents showed a positive attitude toward them but exhibited neutral attitudes toward free-ranging dogs. Gender emerged as the most important determinant of attitudes toward wild predators, with men showing higher positive attitude score toward wild predators than women. Our findings highlight the context specific variation in human-wildlife interactions and emphasize that generalizations must be avoided in the absence of site specific evidence. Dataset Canis lupus Unknown
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftsmithonian
language unknown
topic Conservation and Biodiversity
Biological Adaptation
Speciation and Extinction
Animal Behaviour
Global Change Biology
Canis lupus
human-wildlife relationships
human-wildlife conflict (HWC)
livestock depredation
multiple use landscapes
Panthera uncia
pastoralism
urban wildlife
spellingShingle Conservation and Biodiversity
Biological Adaptation
Speciation and Extinction
Animal Behaviour
Global Change Biology
Canis lupus
human-wildlife relationships
human-wildlife conflict (HWC)
livestock depredation
multiple use landscapes
Panthera uncia
pastoralism
urban wildlife
Meenal Pahuja (11842322)
Rishi Kumar Sharma (10825891)
Table_1_Wild Predators, Livestock, and Free Ranging Dogs: Patterns of Livestock Mortality and Attitudes of People Toward Predators in an Urbanizing Trans-Himalayan Landscape.DOCX
topic_facet Conservation and Biodiversity
Biological Adaptation
Speciation and Extinction
Animal Behaviour
Global Change Biology
Canis lupus
human-wildlife relationships
human-wildlife conflict (HWC)
livestock depredation
multiple use landscapes
Panthera uncia
pastoralism
urban wildlife
description Livestock depredation by large carnivores is a significant source of conflicts over predators and an important conservation and economic concern. Preventing livestock loss to wild predators is a substantial focus of human-carnivore conflict mitigation programs. A key assumption of the preventive strategy is reduction in the livestock losses leading to a positive shift in the attitudes toward predators. Therefore, it is important to quantify the true extent of livestock mortality caused by wild predators and its influence on attitudes of the affected communities. We examined seasonal and spatial patterns of livestock mortality and factors influencing people's attitudes toward wild predators i.e., snow leopards (Panthera uncia) and wolves (Canis lupus chanco) and free-ranging dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) in a Trans-Himalayan urbanizing landscape in India. We used systematic sampling to select the survey households and implemented a semi-structured questionnaire to respondents. The sampled villages (n = 16) represent a mosaic of urban and agricultural ecosystems within a radius of 40 km of Leh town. In 2016–2017, 93% of the sampled households lost livestock to predators, accounting for 0.93 animals per household per year. However, of the total events of livestock mortality, 33% were because of weather/natural events, 24% by snow leopards, 20% because of disease, 15% because of free-ranging dogs and 9% because of wolves. The annual economic loss per household because of livestock mortality was USD 371, a substantial loss given the average per capita income of USD 270 in the region. Of the total loss, weather/natural events caused highest loss of USD 131 (35%), followed by snow leopards USD 91 (25%), disease USD 87 (24%), free ranging dogs USD 48 (13%), and wolves USD 14 (4%). Despite losing a considerable proportion of livestock (33 %) to wild predators, respondents showed a positive attitude toward them but exhibited neutral attitudes toward free-ranging dogs. Gender emerged as the most important determinant of attitudes toward wild predators, with men showing higher positive attitude score toward wild predators than women. Our findings highlight the context specific variation in human-wildlife interactions and emphasize that generalizations must be avoided in the absence of site specific evidence.
format Dataset
author Meenal Pahuja (11842322)
Rishi Kumar Sharma (10825891)
author_facet Meenal Pahuja (11842322)
Rishi Kumar Sharma (10825891)
author_sort Meenal Pahuja (11842322)
title Table_1_Wild Predators, Livestock, and Free Ranging Dogs: Patterns of Livestock Mortality and Attitudes of People Toward Predators in an Urbanizing Trans-Himalayan Landscape.DOCX
title_short Table_1_Wild Predators, Livestock, and Free Ranging Dogs: Patterns of Livestock Mortality and Attitudes of People Toward Predators in an Urbanizing Trans-Himalayan Landscape.DOCX
title_full Table_1_Wild Predators, Livestock, and Free Ranging Dogs: Patterns of Livestock Mortality and Attitudes of People Toward Predators in an Urbanizing Trans-Himalayan Landscape.DOCX
title_fullStr Table_1_Wild Predators, Livestock, and Free Ranging Dogs: Patterns of Livestock Mortality and Attitudes of People Toward Predators in an Urbanizing Trans-Himalayan Landscape.DOCX
title_full_unstemmed Table_1_Wild Predators, Livestock, and Free Ranging Dogs: Patterns of Livestock Mortality and Attitudes of People Toward Predators in an Urbanizing Trans-Himalayan Landscape.DOCX
title_sort table_1_wild predators, livestock, and free ranging dogs: patterns of livestock mortality and attitudes of people toward predators in an urbanizing trans-himalayan landscape.docx
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.3389/fcosc.2021.767650.s001
genre Canis lupus
genre_facet Canis lupus
op_relation https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_Wild_Predators_Livestock_and_Free_Ranging_Dogs_Patterns_of_Livestock_Mortality_and_Attitudes_of_People_Toward_Predators_in_an_Urbanizing_Trans-Himalayan_Landscape_DOCX/17210132
doi:10.3389/fcosc.2021.767650.s001
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fcosc.2021.767650.s001
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