Monitoring rhinoceroses in Namibia’s private custodianship properties

Routinely censusing rhinoceros’ populations is central to their conservation and protection from illegal killing. In Namibia, both white (Ceratotherium simum) and black (Diceros bicornis) rhinoceros occur on private land, in the latter case under a custodianship program of the Namibian Ministry of E...

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Main Authors: Zoe C. Jewell, Sky Alibhai, Peter R. Law, Kenneth Uiseb, Stephen Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-08-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/9670.pdf
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spelling doaj-f72c0ddf69de4633ad6ca15c79384d5e2020-11-25T03:20:16ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-08-018e967010.7717/peerj.9670Monitoring rhinoceroses in Namibia’s private custodianship propertiesZoe C. Jewell0Sky Alibhai1Peter R. Law2Kenneth Uiseb3Stephen Lee4Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, Durham, NC, United States of AmericaNicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, Durham, NC, United States of AmericaAfrican Centre for Conservation Ecology, Nelson Mandela University, Port Elizabeth, South AfricaDirectorate of Scientific Services, The Ministry of Environment and Tourism, Windhoek, NamibiaUS Army Research Office, Cary, NC, United States of AmericaRoutinely censusing rhinoceros’ populations is central to their conservation and protection from illegal killing. In Namibia, both white (Ceratotherium simum) and black (Diceros bicornis) rhinoceros occur on private land, in the latter case under a custodianship program of the Namibian Ministry of Environment and Tourism (MET). Black rhinoceros custodian landowners are responsible for the protection of the rhinoceroses on their land and are required to report regularly to the MET. Monitoring imposes a financial burden on custodians yet many of the techniques used involve expensive monitoring techniques that include the need for aerial support and/or animal instrumentation. During May and June 2018, WildTrack undertook a pilot study to census black and white rhinoceros on three private custodianship properties in Namibia. We tested three footprint identification methods for obtaining estimates of rhinoceros populations in an effort to provide less costly alternative monitoring options to rhinoceros custodians. The first was a full monitoring protocol with two components: (a) tracking each individual animal and matching them to their footprints, (b) identifying those individuals from the heel lines on the prints. The second method used simple visual heel line identification ex-situ, and the third method used just an objective footprint identification technique. These methods offer different options of fieldwork labour and cost and were designed to offer monitoring options to custodians that provided information about rhinoceros movement and location, with minimal disturbance to the rhinoceros, and best matched their human and economic resources. In this study, we describe the three methods and report the results of the pilot study to compare and evaluate their utility for rhinoceros monitoring. The first method successfully matched each trail photographed to a known rhinoceros at each site. When the other two methods disagreed with the first, they did so by failing to match single trails to a known rhinoceros, thereby creating fictitious identities consisting of a single trail. This failure occurred twice in one application, but otherwise at most once. We expect this failure can be eliminated through more stringent criteria for collecting photographs of footprints. We also briefly compare the use of footprint monitoring with other commonly used monitoring techniques. On this basis, landowners hosting rhinoceros can evaluate which method best suits their needs and resources.https://peerj.com/articles/9670.pdfRhinocerosPopulation monitoringNamibiaNon-invasiveFootprintsTracking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zoe C. Jewell
Sky Alibhai
Peter R. Law
Kenneth Uiseb
Stephen Lee
spellingShingle Zoe C. Jewell
Sky Alibhai
Peter R. Law
Kenneth Uiseb
Stephen Lee
Monitoring rhinoceroses in Namibia’s private custodianship properties
PeerJ
Rhinoceros
Population monitoring
Namibia
Non-invasive
Footprints
Tracking
author_facet Zoe C. Jewell
Sky Alibhai
Peter R. Law
Kenneth Uiseb
Stephen Lee
author_sort Zoe C. Jewell
title Monitoring rhinoceroses in Namibia’s private custodianship properties
title_short Monitoring rhinoceroses in Namibia’s private custodianship properties
title_full Monitoring rhinoceroses in Namibia’s private custodianship properties
title_fullStr Monitoring rhinoceroses in Namibia’s private custodianship properties
title_full_unstemmed Monitoring rhinoceroses in Namibia’s private custodianship properties
title_sort monitoring rhinoceroses in namibia’s private custodianship properties
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Routinely censusing rhinoceros’ populations is central to their conservation and protection from illegal killing. In Namibia, both white (Ceratotherium simum) and black (Diceros bicornis) rhinoceros occur on private land, in the latter case under a custodianship program of the Namibian Ministry of Environment and Tourism (MET). Black rhinoceros custodian landowners are responsible for the protection of the rhinoceroses on their land and are required to report regularly to the MET. Monitoring imposes a financial burden on custodians yet many of the techniques used involve expensive monitoring techniques that include the need for aerial support and/or animal instrumentation. During May and June 2018, WildTrack undertook a pilot study to census black and white rhinoceros on three private custodianship properties in Namibia. We tested three footprint identification methods for obtaining estimates of rhinoceros populations in an effort to provide less costly alternative monitoring options to rhinoceros custodians. The first was a full monitoring protocol with two components: (a) tracking each individual animal and matching them to their footprints, (b) identifying those individuals from the heel lines on the prints. The second method used simple visual heel line identification ex-situ, and the third method used just an objective footprint identification technique. These methods offer different options of fieldwork labour and cost and were designed to offer monitoring options to custodians that provided information about rhinoceros movement and location, with minimal disturbance to the rhinoceros, and best matched their human and economic resources. In this study, we describe the three methods and report the results of the pilot study to compare and evaluate their utility for rhinoceros monitoring. The first method successfully matched each trail photographed to a known rhinoceros at each site. When the other two methods disagreed with the first, they did so by failing to match single trails to a known rhinoceros, thereby creating fictitious identities consisting of a single trail. This failure occurred twice in one application, but otherwise at most once. We expect this failure can be eliminated through more stringent criteria for collecting photographs of footprints. We also briefly compare the use of footprint monitoring with other commonly used monitoring techniques. On this basis, landowners hosting rhinoceros can evaluate which method best suits their needs and resources.
topic Rhinoceros
Population monitoring
Namibia
Non-invasive
Footprints
Tracking
url https://peerj.com/articles/9670.pdf
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