Mapping threatened Thai bovids provides opportunities for improved conservation outcomes in Asia

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Author listWantida Horpiencharoen, Renata L. Muylaert, Jonathan C. Marshall, Reju Sam John, Antony J. Lynam, Alex Riggio, Alexander Godfrey, Dusit Ngoprasert, George A. Gale, Eric Ash, Francesco Bisi, Giacomo Cremonesi, Gopalasamy Reuben Clements, Marnoch Yindee, Nay Myo Shwe, Chanratana Pin, Thomas N. E. Gray, Saw Soe Aung, Seree Nakbun, Stephanie G. Manka, Robert Steinmetz, Rungnapa Phoonjampa, Naret Seuaturien, Worrapan Phumanee and David T. S. Hayman

PublisherThe Royal Society

Publication year2024

JournalRoyal Society Open Science (2054-5703)

Volume number11

Issue number9

Start page1

End page28

Number of pages28

ISSN2054-5703

eISSN2054-5703

URLhttps://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsos.240574


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Abstract

Wild bovids provide important ecosystem functions as seed dispersers and vegetation modifiers. Five wild bovids remain in Thailand: gaur (Bos gaurus), banteng (Bos javanicus), wild water buffalo (Bubalus arnee), mainland serow (Capricornis sumatraensis) and Chinese goral (Naemorhedus griseus). Their populations and habitats have declined substantially and become fragmented by land-use change. We use ecological niche models to quantify how much potential suitable habitat for these species remains within protected areas in Asia and then specifically Thailand. We combined species occurrence data from several sources (e.g. mainly camera traps and direct observation) with environmental variables and species-specific and single, large accessible areas in ensemble models to generate suitability maps, using out-of-sample predictions to validate model performance against new independent data. Gaur, banteng and buffalo models showed reasonable model accuracy throughout the entire distribution (greater than or equal to 62%) and in Thailand (greater than or equal to 80%), whereas serow and goral models performed poorly for the entire distribution and in Thailand, though 5 km movement buffers markedly improved the performance for serow. Large suitable areas were identified in Thailand and India for gaur, Cambodia and Thailand for banteng and India for buffalo. Over 50% of suitable habitat is located outside protected areas, highlighting the need for habitat management and conflict mitigation outside protected areas.


Keywords

Wild bovids


Last updated on 2025-31-03 at 12:00