Effects of the number of people on efficient capture and sample collection: A lion case study
2013
Ferreira, Sam M.(SANParks Scientific Services) | Maruping, Nkabeng T.(Tshwane University of Technology Department of Nature Conservation) | Schoultz, Darius(Ajubatus Foundation) | Smit, Travis R.(Ajubatus Foundation)
Certain carnivore research projects and approaches depend on successful capture of individuals of interest. The number of people present at a capture site may determine success of a capture. In this study 36 lion capture cases in the Kruger National Park were used to evaluate whether the number of people present at a capture site influenced lion response rates and whether the number of people at a sampling site influenced the time it took to process the collected samples. The analyses suggest that when nine or fewer people were present, lions appeared faster at a call-up locality compared with when there were more than nine people. The number of people, however, did not influence the time it took to process the lions. It is proposed that efficient lion capturing should spatially separate capture and processing sites and minimise the number of people at a capture site.
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