Indian Grey Wolf and Striped Hyaena sharing from the same bowl: High niche overlap between top predators in a human-dominated landscape

The Semi-arid wildlands of the West Bengal state of India are known habitats of Indian Grey Wolf (Canis lupus pallipes) and Striped Hyaena (Hyaena hyaena) in India. However, increasing anthropogenic pressure in these regions is one major factor behind habitat loss and rising carnivore-human conflict...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tanoy Mukherjee, Ishita Chongder, Shankhamala Ghosh, Akash Dutta, Abhishek Singh, Ritam Dutta, Bheem Dutt Joshi, Mukesh Thakur, Lalit Kumar Sharma, Chinnadurai Venkatraman, Debal Ray, Kailash Chandra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-08-01
Series:Global Ecology and Conservation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989421002328
id doaj-8d124b789f34482793cbc990cc6bd555
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8d124b789f34482793cbc990cc6bd5552021-08-12T04:34:40ZengElsevierGlobal Ecology and Conservation2351-98942021-08-0128e01682Indian Grey Wolf and Striped Hyaena sharing from the same bowl: High niche overlap between top predators in a human-dominated landscapeTanoy Mukherjee0Ishita Chongder1Shankhamala Ghosh2Akash Dutta3Abhishek Singh4Ritam Dutta5Bheem Dutt Joshi6Mukesh Thakur7Lalit Kumar Sharma8Chinnadurai Venkatraman9Debal Ray10Kailash Chandra11Zoological Survey of India, Prani Vigyan Bhawan, New Alipore, Kolkata, West Bengal, IndiaZoological Survey of India, Prani Vigyan Bhawan, New Alipore, Kolkata, West Bengal, IndiaZoological Survey of India, Prani Vigyan Bhawan, New Alipore, Kolkata, West Bengal, IndiaZoological Survey of India, Prani Vigyan Bhawan, New Alipore, Kolkata, West Bengal, IndiaZoological Survey of India, Prani Vigyan Bhawan, New Alipore, Kolkata, West Bengal, IndiaZoological Survey of India, Prani Vigyan Bhawan, New Alipore, Kolkata, West Bengal, IndiaZoological Survey of India, Prani Vigyan Bhawan, New Alipore, Kolkata, West Bengal, IndiaZoological Survey of India, Prani Vigyan Bhawan, New Alipore, Kolkata, West Bengal, IndiaZoological Survey of India, Prani Vigyan Bhawan, New Alipore, Kolkata, West Bengal, India; Corresponding author.Zoological Survey of India, Prani Vigyan Bhawan, New Alipore, Kolkata, West Bengal, IndiaDepartment of Forest, Government of West Bengal, Kolkata, West Bengal, IndiaZoological Survey of India, Prani Vigyan Bhawan, New Alipore, Kolkata, West Bengal, IndiaThe Semi-arid wildlands of the West Bengal state of India are known habitats of Indian Grey Wolf (Canis lupus pallipes) and Striped Hyaena (Hyaena hyaena) in India. However, increasing anthropogenic pressure in these regions is one major factor behind habitat loss and rising carnivore-human conflict. We mapped the suitable habitat and estimated the niche overlap of both species in the study landscape. Further, we assessed the habitat quality, identified corridors and quantified land sharing by both species. The anthropogenic disturbance (human settlements) was found to be one of the most significant contributors for both species. The higher Schoener’s D (0.612) and Hellinger’s based I value (0.858) indicates a considerable niche overlap of about 3529 km2. We observed a high level of fragmentation in suitable patches of Grey Wolf compared to the Striped Hyaena. For both Striped Hyaena and Grey Wolf, connectivity exists among the large patch of western and southern Purulia and Bankura. The Grey Wolf corridors in the Jhargram district were also found connected with other areas. We found that both the species, which are generally known rivals showing tolerance towards each other, which is an strong evidence of land sharing among the species. We recommend that the suitable patches and corridors identified in the study may be prioritized for conservation and management.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989421002328Indian Grey WolfStriped HyaenaBiological corridorsEnsemble habitat modelingSouth BengalResource poor landscape
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tanoy Mukherjee
Ishita Chongder
Shankhamala Ghosh
Akash Dutta
Abhishek Singh
Ritam Dutta
Bheem Dutt Joshi
Mukesh Thakur
Lalit Kumar Sharma
Chinnadurai Venkatraman
Debal Ray
Kailash Chandra
spellingShingle Tanoy Mukherjee
Ishita Chongder
Shankhamala Ghosh
Akash Dutta
Abhishek Singh
Ritam Dutta
Bheem Dutt Joshi
Mukesh Thakur
Lalit Kumar Sharma
Chinnadurai Venkatraman
Debal Ray
Kailash Chandra
Indian Grey Wolf and Striped Hyaena sharing from the same bowl: High niche overlap between top predators in a human-dominated landscape
Global Ecology and Conservation
Indian Grey Wolf
Striped Hyaena
Biological corridors
Ensemble habitat modeling
South Bengal
Resource poor landscape
author_facet Tanoy Mukherjee
Ishita Chongder
Shankhamala Ghosh
Akash Dutta
Abhishek Singh
Ritam Dutta
Bheem Dutt Joshi
Mukesh Thakur
Lalit Kumar Sharma
Chinnadurai Venkatraman
Debal Ray
Kailash Chandra
author_sort Tanoy Mukherjee
title Indian Grey Wolf and Striped Hyaena sharing from the same bowl: High niche overlap between top predators in a human-dominated landscape
title_short Indian Grey Wolf and Striped Hyaena sharing from the same bowl: High niche overlap between top predators in a human-dominated landscape
title_full Indian Grey Wolf and Striped Hyaena sharing from the same bowl: High niche overlap between top predators in a human-dominated landscape
title_fullStr Indian Grey Wolf and Striped Hyaena sharing from the same bowl: High niche overlap between top predators in a human-dominated landscape
title_full_unstemmed Indian Grey Wolf and Striped Hyaena sharing from the same bowl: High niche overlap between top predators in a human-dominated landscape
title_sort indian grey wolf and striped hyaena sharing from the same bowl: high niche overlap between top predators in a human-dominated landscape
publisher Elsevier
series Global Ecology and Conservation
issn 2351-9894
publishDate 2021-08-01
description The Semi-arid wildlands of the West Bengal state of India are known habitats of Indian Grey Wolf (Canis lupus pallipes) and Striped Hyaena (Hyaena hyaena) in India. However, increasing anthropogenic pressure in these regions is one major factor behind habitat loss and rising carnivore-human conflict. We mapped the suitable habitat and estimated the niche overlap of both species in the study landscape. Further, we assessed the habitat quality, identified corridors and quantified land sharing by both species. The anthropogenic disturbance (human settlements) was found to be one of the most significant contributors for both species. The higher Schoener’s D (0.612) and Hellinger’s based I value (0.858) indicates a considerable niche overlap of about 3529 km2. We observed a high level of fragmentation in suitable patches of Grey Wolf compared to the Striped Hyaena. For both Striped Hyaena and Grey Wolf, connectivity exists among the large patch of western and southern Purulia and Bankura. The Grey Wolf corridors in the Jhargram district were also found connected with other areas. We found that both the species, which are generally known rivals showing tolerance towards each other, which is an strong evidence of land sharing among the species. We recommend that the suitable patches and corridors identified in the study may be prioritized for conservation and management.
topic Indian Grey Wolf
Striped Hyaena
Biological corridors
Ensemble habitat modeling
South Bengal
Resource poor landscape
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2351989421002328
work_keys_str_mv AT tanoymukherjee indiangreywolfandstripedhyaenasharingfromthesamebowlhighnicheoverlapbetweentoppredatorsinahumandominatedlandscape
AT ishitachongder indiangreywolfandstripedhyaenasharingfromthesamebowlhighnicheoverlapbetweentoppredatorsinahumandominatedlandscape
AT shankhamalaghosh indiangreywolfandstripedhyaenasharingfromthesamebowlhighnicheoverlapbetweentoppredatorsinahumandominatedlandscape
AT akashdutta indiangreywolfandstripedhyaenasharingfromthesamebowlhighnicheoverlapbetweentoppredatorsinahumandominatedlandscape
AT abhisheksingh indiangreywolfandstripedhyaenasharingfromthesamebowlhighnicheoverlapbetweentoppredatorsinahumandominatedlandscape
AT ritamdutta indiangreywolfandstripedhyaenasharingfromthesamebowlhighnicheoverlapbetweentoppredatorsinahumandominatedlandscape
AT bheemduttjoshi indiangreywolfandstripedhyaenasharingfromthesamebowlhighnicheoverlapbetweentoppredatorsinahumandominatedlandscape
AT mukeshthakur indiangreywolfandstripedhyaenasharingfromthesamebowlhighnicheoverlapbetweentoppredatorsinahumandominatedlandscape
AT lalitkumarsharma indiangreywolfandstripedhyaenasharingfromthesamebowlhighnicheoverlapbetweentoppredatorsinahumandominatedlandscape
AT chinnaduraivenkatraman indiangreywolfandstripedhyaenasharingfromthesamebowlhighnicheoverlapbetweentoppredatorsinahumandominatedlandscape
AT debalray indiangreywolfandstripedhyaenasharingfromthesamebowlhighnicheoverlapbetweentoppredatorsinahumandominatedlandscape
AT kailashchandra indiangreywolfandstripedhyaenasharingfromthesamebowlhighnicheoverlapbetweentoppredatorsinahumandominatedlandscape
_version_ 1721209891275669504