Data from: The distribution and numbers of cheetah (Acinonyx jubatus) in southern Africa
Assessing the numbers and distribution of threatened species is a central challenge in conservation, often made difficult because the species of concern are rare and elusive. For some predators, this may be compounded by their being sparsely distributed over large areas. Such is the case with the ch...
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Zusammenfassung: | Assessing the numbers and distribution of threatened species is a central
challenge in conservation, often made difficult because the species of
concern are rare and elusive. For some predators, this may be compounded
by their being sparsely distributed over large areas. Such is the case
with the cheetah Acinonyx jubatus. The IUCN Red List process solicits
comments, is democratic, transparent, widely-used, and has recently
assessed the species. Here, we present additional methods to that process
and provide quantitative approaches that may afford greater detail and a
benchmark against which to compare future assessments. The cheetah poses
challenges, but also affords unique opportunities. It is photogenic,
allowing the compilation of thousands of crowd-sourced data. It is also
persecuted for killing livestock, enabling estimation of local population
densities from the numbers persecuted. Documented instances of persecution
in areas with known human and livestock density mean that these data can
provide an estimate of where the species may or may not occur in areas
without observational data. Compilations of extensive telemetry data
coupled with nearly 20,000 additional observations from 39 sources show
that free-ranging cheetahs were present across approximately 789,700 km2
of Namibia, Botswana, South Africa, and Zimbabwe (56%, 22%, 12% and 10%
respectively) from 2010 to 2016, with an estimated adult population of
3,577 animals. We identified a further 742,800 km2 of potential cheetah
habitat within the study region with low human and livestock densities,
where another ∼3,250 cheetahs may occur. Unlike many previous estimates,
we make the data available and provide explicit information on exactly
where cheetahs occur, or are unlikely to occur. We stress the value of
gathering data from public sources though these data were mostly from
well-visited protected areas. There is a contiguous, transboundary
population of cheetah in southern Africa, known to be the largest in the
world. We suggest that this population is more threatened than believed
due to the concentration of about 55% of free-ranging individuals in two
ecoregions. This area overlaps with commercial farmland with high
persecution risk; adult cheetahs were removed at the rate of 0.3
individuals per 100 km2 per year. Our population estimate for confirmed
cheetah presence areas is 11% lower than the IUCN’s current assessment for
the same region, lending additional support to the recent call for the |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.7n4h4 |