A ghost fence-gap: surprising wildlife usage of an obsolete fence crossing

Wildlife fencing has become more prevalent throughout Africa, although it has come with a price of increased habitat fragmentation and loss of habitat connectivity. In an effort to increase connectivity, managers of fenced conservancies can place strategic gaps along the fences to allow wildlife acc...

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Main Authors: Marc Dupuis-Desormeaux, Timothy N. Kaaria, Mary Mwololo, Zeke Davidson, Suzanne E. MacDonald
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2018-11-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/5950.pdf
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spelling doaj-e0d53333ea584824887b8562b694f4fb2020-11-24T20:42:15ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592018-11-016e595010.7717/peerj.5950A ghost fence-gap: surprising wildlife usage of an obsolete fence crossingMarc Dupuis-Desormeaux0Timothy N. Kaaria1Mary Mwololo2Zeke Davidson3Suzanne E. MacDonald4Department of Biology, York University, Toronto, ON, CanadaLewa Wildlife Conservancy, Isiolo, KenyaLewa Wildlife Conservancy, Isiolo, KenyaMarwell Wildlife, WinchesterDepartment of Psychology, York University, Toronto, ON, CanadaWildlife fencing has become more prevalent throughout Africa, although it has come with a price of increased habitat fragmentation and loss of habitat connectivity. In an effort to increase connectivity, managers of fenced conservancies can place strategic gaps along the fences to allow wildlife access to outside habitat, permitting exploration, dispersal and seasonal migration. Wildlife can become accustomed to certain movement pathways and can show fidelity to these routes over many years, even at the path level. Our study site has three dedicated wildlife crossings (fence-gaps) in its 142 km perimeter fence, and we continuously monitor these fence-gaps with camera-traps. We monitored one fence-gap before and after a 1.49 km fence section was completely removed and 6.8 km was reconfigured to leave only a two-strand electric fence meant to exclude elephant and giraffe, all other species being able to cross under the exclusionary fence. The removal and reconfiguration of the fence effectively rendered this fence-gap (which was left in place structurally) as a “ghost” fence-gap, as wildlife now had many options along the 8.29 km shared border to cross into the neighboring habitat. Although we documented some decline in the number of crossing events at the ghost-gap, surprisingly, 19 months after the total removal of the fence, we continued to document the usage of this crossing location by wildlife including by species that had not been previously detected at this location. We discuss potential drivers of this persistent and counterintuitive behavior as well as management implications.https://peerj.com/articles/5950.pdfMammalsMovementConservationHyenaRhinocerosFencing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marc Dupuis-Desormeaux
Timothy N. Kaaria
Mary Mwololo
Zeke Davidson
Suzanne E. MacDonald
spellingShingle Marc Dupuis-Desormeaux
Timothy N. Kaaria
Mary Mwololo
Zeke Davidson
Suzanne E. MacDonald
A ghost fence-gap: surprising wildlife usage of an obsolete fence crossing
PeerJ
Mammals
Movement
Conservation
Hyena
Rhinoceros
Fencing
author_facet Marc Dupuis-Desormeaux
Timothy N. Kaaria
Mary Mwololo
Zeke Davidson
Suzanne E. MacDonald
author_sort Marc Dupuis-Desormeaux
title A ghost fence-gap: surprising wildlife usage of an obsolete fence crossing
title_short A ghost fence-gap: surprising wildlife usage of an obsolete fence crossing
title_full A ghost fence-gap: surprising wildlife usage of an obsolete fence crossing
title_fullStr A ghost fence-gap: surprising wildlife usage of an obsolete fence crossing
title_full_unstemmed A ghost fence-gap: surprising wildlife usage of an obsolete fence crossing
title_sort ghost fence-gap: surprising wildlife usage of an obsolete fence crossing
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Wildlife fencing has become more prevalent throughout Africa, although it has come with a price of increased habitat fragmentation and loss of habitat connectivity. In an effort to increase connectivity, managers of fenced conservancies can place strategic gaps along the fences to allow wildlife access to outside habitat, permitting exploration, dispersal and seasonal migration. Wildlife can become accustomed to certain movement pathways and can show fidelity to these routes over many years, even at the path level. Our study site has three dedicated wildlife crossings (fence-gaps) in its 142 km perimeter fence, and we continuously monitor these fence-gaps with camera-traps. We monitored one fence-gap before and after a 1.49 km fence section was completely removed and 6.8 km was reconfigured to leave only a two-strand electric fence meant to exclude elephant and giraffe, all other species being able to cross under the exclusionary fence. The removal and reconfiguration of the fence effectively rendered this fence-gap (which was left in place structurally) as a “ghost” fence-gap, as wildlife now had many options along the 8.29 km shared border to cross into the neighboring habitat. Although we documented some decline in the number of crossing events at the ghost-gap, surprisingly, 19 months after the total removal of the fence, we continued to document the usage of this crossing location by wildlife including by species that had not been previously detected at this location. We discuss potential drivers of this persistent and counterintuitive behavior as well as management implications.
topic Mammals
Movement
Conservation
Hyena
Rhinoceros
Fencing
url https://peerj.com/articles/5950.pdf
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