Mammal persistence along Riparian forests in Western India within a hydropower reservoir 55 years post construction
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Date
Authors
Jelil, Shah Nawaz
Gaykar, Avinash
Girkar, Natasha
Ben, Clement
Hayward, Matt W.
Krishnamurthy, Ramesh
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Frontiers Media
Abstract
While the negative impacts of dam construction on downstream river stretches and
riparian forests are well studied, the status of wildlife presence and persistence in
upstream reservoir deltas is virtually unknown. We investigated the drivers of terrestrial
mammal occupancy and persistence along riparian forests of Koyna reservoir in western
India 55 years after its construction. We adopted a catchment-wide field design
grounded in the river continuum concept and sampled different stream orders within the
reservoir. Camera traps, nested in an occupancy modeling framework, were deployed
across 72 riparian sites and replicated for four seasons across all stream types. We
recorded a total of nineteen species of terrestrial mammals during the study period.
Multi-season occupancy models revealed three key patterns of mammal persistence:
(a) ungulates were more frequently photo-captured in riparian forests; gaur and wild pig
had the highest proportions of the total sampled area (0.84 0.12 SE; 0.77 0.07
SE, respectively); (b) small-sized ungulates were more vulnerable to local extinction than
large-bodied ungulates; extinction probability was highest for barking deer (0.59 0.07)
and lowest for sambar (0.15 0.07); and (c) distance from stream played major
roles in determining mammal detection. Riparian forests are fundamentally important to
ecosystem functioning and biodiversity conservation, and using the data from this study,
managers can plan to sustain high mammal persistence along riparian forests at Koyna
reservoir or similar Indian reserves. Further, our robust sampling approach, grounded in
the terrestrial-riverine continuum concept, can be applied globally to understand species
assemblages, aiding in multi-landscape and wildlife management planning.
Description
The study was part of a larger project entitled “Tiger Recovery Strategy and Long-term Monitoring in Sahyadri Tiger Reserve, Maharashtra.”
Keywords
Dammed river, Occupancy modeling, Colonization, Extinction, Reservoir biodiversity, River continuum
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Jelil, S.N., Gaykar, A., Girkar, N., Ben, C., Hayward, M.W. & Krishnamurthy, R. (2021) Mammal
Persistence Along Riparian Forests
in Western India Within a Hydropower
Reservoir 55 Years Post Construction.
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 9:643285.
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2021.643285.
