A comparison of food habits and prey preference of Amur tiger (Panthera tigris altaica) at three sites in the Russian Far East

2015
Prey availability is one of the principal drivers of tigerdistribution and abundance. Therefore, formulating effective conservation strategies requires a clear understanding of tigerdiet. We used scat analysis in combination with data on the abundance of several prey species to estimate Amur tigerdiet and preference at 3 sites in the Russian Far East. We also examined the effect of pseudoreplicationon estimates of tigerdiet. We collected 770 scats across the 3 sites. Similar to previous studies, we found that tigersprimarily preyed on medium to large ungulates, with wild boar, roe, sika and red deer collectively comprising 86.7% of total biomass consumed on average. According to Jacobs’ index, tigerspreferred wild boar, and avoided sika deer. Variation in preference indices derived from these scat analyses compared to indices derived from kill data appear to be due to adjustments in biomass intake when sex–age of a killed individual is known: a component missing from scat data. Pseudoreplication(multiple samples collected from a single kill site) also skewed results derived from scat analyses. Scat analysis still appears useful in providing insight into the diets of carnivores when the full spectrum of prey species needs to be identified, or when sample sizes from kill data are not sufficient. When sample sizes of kill data are large (as is now possible with GPS-collared animals), kill data adjusted by sex–age categories probably provides the most accurate estimates of prey biomass composition. Our results provide further confirmation of the centrality of medium ungulates, in particular wild boar, to Amur tigerdiet, and suggest that the protection of this group of species is critical to Amur tigerconservation.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    24
    References
    34
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []
    Baidu
    map