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Tanzania is home to three species of pangolins: Temminck's pangolin (), giant ground pangolin (), and white-bellied pangolin (). However, distribution and habitat preferences have yet to be well known across the Ruaha landscape, encompassing the core of Ruaha National Park and adjacent protected and unprotected village lands. This area is thought to hold Temminck's pangolin. Drawing upon local knowledge to help inform conservation planning, we used semi-structured interviews among village members to investigate the distribution and activity pattern of Temminck's pangolins in the Ruaha landscape. Our results show that village lands hold potential habitats for pangolins, and unsurprisingly, that human land use by activity type and human behavior itself influences pangolin observations across the landscape, more so than pangolin ecology. We also learned that more than half of our study's participants did not perceive a decreasing population trend in pangolins over 5 years, despite reports from authorities. Our study provides novel and important baseline information about the distribution of pangolins in the Ruaha landscape, which can be used for spatially relevant conservation planning at local and national scales. Given their willingness to share local knowledge about pangolins and participate in pangolin conservation, we suggest that village members be actively engaged in pangolin conservation efforts, including training on monitoring and reporting pangolin population and distribution, and assisting in habitat management.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71987 | DOI Listing |
Ecol Evol
August 2025
Tanzania Research and Conservation Organization Morogoro Tanzania.
Tanzania is home to three species of pangolins: Temminck's pangolin (), giant ground pangolin (), and white-bellied pangolin (). However, distribution and habitat preferences have yet to be well known across the Ruaha landscape, encompassing the core of Ruaha National Park and adjacent protected and unprotected village lands. This area is thought to hold Temminck's pangolin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConserv Biol
December 2023
School of Biology and Environmental Science and Earth Institute, O'Brien Science Centre West, University College Dublin Belfield, Dublin, Ireland.
To evaluate conservation interventions, it is necessary to obtain reliable population trends for short (<10 years) time scales. Telemetry can be used to estimate short-term survival rates and is a common tool for assessing population trends, but it has limitations and can be biased toward specific behavioral traits of tagged individuals. Encounter rates calculated from transects can be useful for assessing changes across multiple species, but they can have large confidence intervals and be affected by variations in survey conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
January 2023
Department of Zoology, Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, Recanati Kaplan Centre, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Conserv Biol
December 2022
Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, Recanati-Kaplan Centre, Oxford, UK.
Large carnivores increasingly inhabit human-affected landscapes, which exhibit heterogeneity in biotic resources, anthropogenic pressures, and management strategies. Understanding large carnivore habitat use in these systems is critical for their conservation, as is the evaluation of competing management approaches and the impacts of significant land-use changes. We used occupancy modeling to investigate habitat use of an intact eastern African large carnivore guild across the 45,000 km Ruaha-Rungwa landscape in south-central Tanzania.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
November 2021
Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, Department of Zoology, University of Oxford, The Recanati-Kaplan Centre, Tubney, United Kingdom.
Africa is home to some of the world's most functionally diverse guilds of large carnivores. However, they are increasingly under threat from anthropogenic pressures that may exacerbate already intense intra-guild competition. Understanding the coexistence mechanisms employed by these species in human-impacted landscapes could help shed light on some of the more subtle ways in which humans may impact wildlife populations, and inform multi-species conservation planning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF