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RSS FeedsRemote Sensing, Vol. 13, Pages 4925: Fishing for Feral Cats in a Naturally Fragmented Rocky Landscape Using Movement Data (Remote Sensing)

 
 

4 december 2021 07:59:01

 
Remote Sensing, Vol. 13, Pages 4925: Fishing for Feral Cats in a Naturally Fragmented Rocky Landscape Using Movement Data (Remote Sensing)
 


Feral cats are one of the most damaging predators on Earth. They can be found throughout most of Australia’s mainland and many of its larger islands, where they are adaptable predators responsible for the decline and extinction of many species of native fauna. Managing feral cat populations to mitigate their impacts is a conservation priority. Control strategies can be better informed by knowledge of the locations that cats frequent the most. However, this information is rarely captured at the population level and therefore requires modelling based on observations of a sample of individuals. Here, we use movement data from collared feral cats to estimate home range sizes by gender and create species distribution models in the Pilbara bioregion of Western Australia. Home ranges were estimated using dynamic Brownian bridge movement models and split into 50% and 95% utilisation distribution contours. Species distribution models used points intersecting with the 50% utilisation contours and thinned by spacing points 500 m apart to remove sampling bias. Male cat home ranges were between 5 km2 (50% utilisation) and 34 km2 (95% utilisation), which were approximately twice the size of the female cats studied (2–17 km2). Species distribution modelling revealed a preference for low-lying riparian habitats with highly productive vegetation cover and a tendency to avoid newly burnt areas and topographically complex, rocky landscapes. Conservation management can benefit by targeting control effort in preferential habitat.


 
141 viewsCategory: Geology, Physics
 
Remote Sensing, Vol. 13, Pages 4901: Remote Sensing of Landslide-Generated Sediment Plumes, Peace River, British Columbia (Remote Sensing)
Remote Sensing, Vol. 13, Pages 4926: Study on the Relationship between Topological Characteristics of Vegetation Ecospatial Network and Carbon Sequestration Capacity in the Yellow River Basin, China (Remote Sensing)
 
 
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