Introduction
The unique forests of Madagascar are threatened by a number of anthropogenic factors including deforestation, human population growth leading to habitat loss, and introduction of exotic species (Harper et al., Reference Harper, Steininger, Tucker, Juhn and Hawkins2007; Zinner et al., Reference Zinner, Wygoda, Razafimanantsoa, Rasoloarison, Andrianandrasana, Ganzhorn and Torkler2014; Schüßlera et al., Reference Schüßlera, Radespiel, Ratsimbazafy and Mantilla-Contreras2018). In many of the island's forested ecosystems, including the spiny forests, eastern rainforests, and dry deciduous forests, the fosa Cryptoprocta ferox is an apex predator. The fosa's diet includes small to medium-sized animals such as lemurs, but varies by region and season (Köhncke & Leonhardt, Reference Köhncke and Leonhardt1986; Hawkins, Reference Hawkins, Goodman and Benstead2003; Dollar et al., Reference Dollar, Ganzhorn, Goodman, Gursky and Nekaris2007; Mann et al., Reference Mann, Rakotondraparany, Seing and Gandola2015). The fosa is generally considered solitary outside the mating season, but several recent studies present evidence of associations between some individuals (Lührs & Kappeler, Reference Lührs and Kappeler2013; Wyza et al., Reference Wyza, Dollar and Stevens2018). Home ranges documented in previous studies were 12–89 km2 during the dry season (Hawkins, Reference Hawkins1998; Lührs & Kappeler, Reference Lührs and Kappeler2013), with males exhibiting spatial overlap with females and other males, and females occupying ranges that overlap with those of males but not those of other females (Hawkins, Reference Hawkins, Goodman and Benstead2003). A flexible cathemeral activity pattern has been reported for fosas, with a slight preference for crepuscular hours (Albignac, Reference Albignac1973; Hawkins, Reference Hawkins1998; Gerber et al., Reference Gerber, Karpanty and Randrianantenaina2012).
Fosas are categorized as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species, for a combination of reasons (Hawkins, Reference Hawkins2016). These include low population densities compared to other tropical carnivores (Rahajanirina, Reference Rahajanirina2003; Hawkins & Racey, Reference Hawkins and Racey2005), country-wide loss of forested habitats (Gerber et al., Reference Gerber, Karpanty and Randrianantenaina2012; Kotschwar Logan et al., Reference Kotschwar Logan, Gerber, Karpanty, Justin and Rabenahy2015), and the introduction of other carnivore species that compete for prey and transmit diseases to fosas (Farris et al., Reference Farris, Golden, Karpanty, Murphy, Stauffer and Ratelolahy2015b; Pomerantz et al., Reference Pomerantz, Rasambainarivo, Dollar, Rahajanirina, Andrianaivoarivelo, Parker and Dubovi2016). Fosas are also subject to intense persecution because they are widely believed to prey on domestic animals, particularly poultry (Woodroffe & Ginsberg, Reference Woodroffe and Ginsberg1998; García & Goodman, Reference García and Goodman2003; Golden, Reference Golden2009; Kotschwar Logan et al., Reference Kotschwar Logan, Gerber, Karpanty, Justin and Rabenahy2015; Farris et al., Reference Farris, Golden, Karpanty, Murphy, Stauffer and Ratelolahy2015b). Only two of Madagascar's 46 national parks are thought to be large enough to maintain viable populations (Hawkins & Racey, Reference Hawkins and Racey2005; Gerber et al., Reference Gerber, Karpanty, Crawford, Kotschwar and Randrianantenaina2010) and fosa numbers have decreased by 30% since 1995, with projections suggesting an additional third could be lost by 2040 (Hawkins, Reference Hawkins2016). Research is needed urgently to inform conservation and management protocols if the fosa is to remain part of Madagascar's unique ecosystems.
To determine the impact of various threats on fosa populations, it is necessary to explore potential shifts in spatial and temporal behaviours. Some carnivores such as the coyote Canis latrans, the spotted hyena Crocuta crocuta and the red fox Vulpes vulpes have successfully adapted to human encroachment and thrive in areas of high human population densities, despite being persecuted (Gloor et al., Reference Gloor, Bontadina, Hegglin, Deplazes and Breitenmoser2001; Riley et al., Reference Riley, Sauvajot, Fuller, York, Kamradt, Bromley and Wayne2003; Grubbs & Krausman, Reference Grubbs and Krausman2009; Abay et al., Reference Abay, Bauer, Gebrihiwot and Deckers2011). It is possible that fosas are also able to adapt to habitat loss by altering their space-use patterns. Additionally, they may avoid encounters with humans by shifting their activity cycle to a nocturnal pattern.
Advances in technology such as GPS collars equipped with accelerometers enable us to explore changes in space use and activity patterns of cryptic species, including the fosa. Such collars also gather critical data on fine-scale movements, which are needed to augment studies on spatial ecology and behaviour that use other methods, particularly across heterogeneous landscapes (Morales & Ellner, Reference Morales and Elner2002; Brown et al., Reference Brown, Kays, Wikelski, Wilson and Klimley2013). Furthermore, accelerometer data allow for location data to be combined with activity patterns associated with locomotion, feeding, resting and social interactions amongst collared individuals (Shepard et al., Reference Shepard, Wilson, Quintana, Laich, Liebsch and Albareda2008; Nathan et al., Reference Nathan, Spiegel, Fortmann-Roe, Harel, Wikelski and Getz2012; Wyza et al., Reference Wyza, Dollar and Stevens2018). These methods have been used to examine behavioural alterations of another cryptic carnivore, the cougar Puma concolor, in residential areas (Wang et al., Reference Wang, Smith and Wilmers2017), and have the potential to be expanded across a variety of taxa.
To our knowledge, this is the first study to employ GPS collars with accelerometers to examine fosa movements and activity patterns near human settlements. It is also the first study using this technology to examine fosa space use at a fine scale in the heavily human-influenced landscape of Ankarafantsika National Park. To explore human–wildlife interactions and fosa spatial ecology, we focused on three main objectives: (1) documenting home range size and habitat selection during the dry season, (2) discerning movement and activity patterns in fragmented forest landscapes, and (3) evaluating fosa spatial and temporal activity in relation to villages located within the Park. Spatial and temporal data offer insights into fosa habitat use and allow us to determine whether fosas frequently range into human settlements and prey upon domestic animals.
Study area
Ankarafantsika National Park in north-western Madagascar is a 135,000 ha dry deciduous forest (Fig. 1), with a dry season during May–October and a wet seasons during November–April (Alonso et al., Reference Alonso, Missa, Schulenberg and Radilofe2002). The Park has been subject to severe deforestation, with 20% of forest cover lost during 1990–2000 (Dollar, Reference Dollar2006). Habitat alteration has been documented even in the most remote areas of the Park (K. Flanigan, pers. comm., 2018). Deforestation in the Park is largely a result of land conversion to cropland and pasture, carried out by people living in eight villages inside the Park and/or bordering its perimeter. Timber, charcoal and non-timber forest products are also harvested (Alonso et al., Reference Alonso, Missa, Schulenberg and Radilofe2002). Village populations vary widely; some areas house single families, whereas the population of the largest village located just outside the Park (Andranofasika) was estimated to be 8,000 in 2001 (Cornell University, 2002). The total human population within the Park's boundaries is difficult to estimate because of the rural and scattered nature of many settlements; the estimated total village area within the Park and immediately adjacent to its borders is 12 km2. A major road (RN4) divides the park into an eastern and a western area and hinders wildlife movements, with documented roadkill mortality (Wyza et al., Reference Wyza, Dollar and Stevens2018).
Methods
Fosa capture and GPS collar deployment
We collected data in the dry seasons of 2016 (June–September) and 2017 (July–October). Fosas were trapped using bobcat traps (Tomahawk, Hazelhurst, USA) along two 2.5 km long trap lines, with a total of 40 traps placed 50–200 m apart. Trap lines were located on either side of RN4 (Fig. 1). The same trap lines were used in both years. Captured fosas were sedated with Telazol (0.05 cm3/kg) in accordance with Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee protocols following Dollar (Reference Dollar2006), then fitted with Telonics TGW-4277-4 GPS Iridium collars (220 g; Telonics, Mesa, USA). We programmed collars to take quick fix pseudoranging spatial data at 20-minute intervals, to mitigate a high failure rate anticipated because of forest cover density. Quick fix pseudoranging allows for data to be transmitted to satellites much faster than traditional GPS methods, which is ideal for tracking small mammals in densely forested habitat. We placed collars only on adults weighing at least 4,400 g, so that collars comprised ≤ 5% of body mass. Animals were placed in a dark recovery cage and monitored until they recovered from anaesthesia, then released at the capture site.
Spatial and temporal analyses
We used only resolved locations (defined by Telonics as those with an accuracy within 30 m 98% of the time and within 10 m 80% of the time) for spatial analyses. Ranging patterns were calculated for kernel density estimates following Worton (Reference Worton1989), and Brownian bridge movement models following Horne et al. (Reference Horne, Garton, Krone and Lewis2007). Kernel density estimates determine the probability of finding a given animal in a certain area, whereas Brownian bridge movement models incorporate pathways and temporal data to calculate where individuals spend the most time within a given home range. We calculated kernel density estimates of 50, 90, and 95% with ad hoc smoothing parameters using the adehabitatHR package in R 3.3.2 (Calenge, Reference Calenge2015). We used these estimates to compare fosa home ranges in Ankarafantsika National Park with those documented in a different dry forest habitat in Kirindy Forest (Lührs & Kappeler, Reference Lührs and Kappeler2013). We computed 50 and 95% Brownian bridge movement models using the R package BBMM (Nielson et al., Reference Nielson, Sawyer and McDonald2015), which allowed us to characterize individual home ranges using high resolution spatial data (20-minute intervals) without the assumption of independence that other home range estimates require. We also combined spatial and temporal data using Brownian bridge movement models, to examine pathways used by individuals within their home ranges, particularly in areas of heavy deforestation. We calculated overlaps between individuals for home ranges derived from both kernel density estimates and Brownian bridge movement models.
We determined habitat selection within each individual's home range using the semi-automatic classification plugin in QGIS 2.18.3 (Congedo, Reference Condego2016). Landsat imagery from June 2016 (U.S. Geological Survey, 2016) was rasterized to delineate forest, water, grassland, and agricultural areas into a land-cover grid with cells of 30 × 30 m. We defined agricultural areas as those used as crop fields or livestock pastures, with clearly visible boundaries. We considered areas that lacked forest cover but did not have clearly visible boundaries in aerial images to be grasslands. Given the small size (often < 30 × 30 m) and scattered nature of the village areas within the Park, we drew polygons of village areas at a scale of 1:10,000 and overlaid those on the land-cover grid. We defined village polygons as areas with at least two buildings visible in satellite imagery, and extended village boundaries to the surrounding forest edge or clear boundaries of other land-cover types. Thus, settlements officially recognized as a single village could comprise multiple polygons, allowing us to distinguish between settled areas and other land-cover types that separated different parts of a village. Secluded settlement locations where multiple buildings were visible in satellite imagery but that were not associated with official villages were also included in the village land-cover type. We then categorized recorded fosa locations by the land-cover type of their position on the grid. We used step selection functions to generate 10 random movements from every recorded position to calculate Manly selection ratios (Manly et al., Reference Manly, McDonald, Thomas, McDonald and Erickson2003), using the R package adehabitat (Calenge, Reference Calenge2015). With the widesIII function we computed habitat use vs availability for each individual, using a χ 2 test. To calculate Manly selection ratios, we condensed GPS data into temporal windows with a resolution of 8 hours, to minimize temporal and spatial autocorrelation (Frair et al., Reference Frair, Nielson, Merril, Lele, Boyse and Munro2004).
All GPS collars were equipped with a three-axis accelerometer to record activity counts simultaneously with geographical coordinates at 20-minute intervals. The accelerometers detected acceleration relative to gravity, with activity counts calculated as the total number of active seconds (where tilt or acceleration/deceleration occurs in any combination of three planes of motion) within each time interval.
Results
Home ranges
We captured five adult and two juvenile fosas, and only the adults were fitted with GPS collars. Three of the collared individuals were captured in 2016 (two males, one female), and two in 2017 (one male, one female). We assigned individual identifiers based on sex and capture order (e.g. the first captured female is F1). We tracked fosas for 14–115 days, yielding 215–2,110 recorded locations per individual (Table 1).
Fosas represented 58% (seven out of 12) of all carnivores captured, with several non-native species (three cats Felis catus, one dog Canis familiaris and one small Indian civet Viverricula indica) also captured in our traps.
Home range size was similar across individuals, with home ranges calculated with Brownian bridge movement models consistently smaller than those estimated by kernel densities (Table 1). The home ranges of all individuals overlapped, with more overlap occurring between dyads in 2016 than in 2017 (Table 2). In 2017, M3 and F2 home ranges occupied almost entirely separate spaces, with a maximum overlap of 11%. The RN4 road did not appear to be a physical boundary for individuals, with collared fosas regularly crossing it in 2016. In 2017 M3 travelled along the road on multiple occasions without crossing it, and F2 travelled near the road only once (Fig. 2). One individual collared in 2016 (M2) was killed on the road in a vehicle collision (Wyza et al., Reference Wyza, Dollar and Stevens2018), demonstrating that RN4 poses a mortality risk.
Habitat selection and avoidance of villages
We calculated habitat selection for all individuals except M2 (Table 1). M2 had fewer recorded locations and could not be directly compared to other individuals in data compressed for Manly selection ratio analysis because the observation period was truncated by road mortality. Habitat selection was non-random, with all individuals in the analysis strongly preferring forested habitat (selection ratio > 1; Fig. 3). All other habitats were generally selected against (selection ratio < 1), with variation in avoidance patterns across individuals. In particular, agricultural and village areas were universally selected against. Fewer than 0.1% (6 of 7,210) of recorded positions across all individuals were within village boundaries. We added a 30 m buffer to village boundaries to examine whether fosas used habitats at the village edge, but only 38 of 7,210 locations (< 1%) were recorded within the village buffer areas. All records within village boundaries were of males (one record of M1, three of M2 and two of M3).
Habitat composition of home ranges was similar across individuals, reflecting the high degree of spatial overlap between individual home ranges. Mean values for selection of habitat types within 95% kernel density estimate home ranges were forest = 0.732 ± SE 0.048, grassland = 0.162 ± SE 0.043, water = 0.003 ± SE 0.001, agriculture = 0.098 ± SE 0.029 and village = 0.005 ± SE 0.001 (Table 3). This confirms strong selection for forest habitats, with forest consistently occupying the highest proportion of each fosa's home range, and other land-cover types encompassing < 50% of all habitats within home ranges.
Activity patterns
Active periods (activity count ≥ 100) of collared fosas occurred across all hours of the day, with resting periods primarily during 5.00–12.00. Overall, fosas exhibited a cathemeral pattern with a selective preference for crepuscular hours across all habitat types (Fig. 4a). Extended resting periods occurred almost exclusively within forest habitats, with mostly relatively high activity counts in other habitat types. Only 3% of inactive locations (91 of 3,159) were outside the forest.
We separated activity counts by active (activity count ≥ 100) and inactive (activity count < 100) for each habitat type and found most locations recorded in non-forest habitat were during active periods (Fig. 4b). The percentages of active periods in non-forest habitats were agriculture = 96% (139 of 144 locations), grassland = 82% (389 of 473), water = 100% (21 of 21) and village = 66% (4 of 6). In contrast, only 57% of locations in forest were during active periods.
Use of forest corridors and patches
Forest patches and corridors are present in the western part of the Park as a result of extensive deforestation (Fig. 1). Patches (forested areas surrounded by deforested areas) ranged in size from < 10 trees to ≤ 1 km wide, and corridors (forest strips connecting forested areas that would otherwise be separated) were 85–400 m wide and 0.4–1 km long. All collared fosas used forest patches and corridors to cross deforested areas throughout the study area (Fig. 5). Continuous forest corridors between grasslands were used particularly regularly by all individuals, and were included in the 50% Brownian bridge movement model home ranges of two individuals (F1 and M1; Fig. 5). In addition, M2 and F2 used a c. 300 m wide corridor in the eastern part of the study area twice each during the study period. Corridors were traversed during 8.00–18.00 and were sometimes used for resting.
Fosas also used forest patches when crossing deforested areas, although less often than continuous corridors. The patch network consisted of three larger and a series of smaller forest patches surrounded by open grassland (Fig. 5). Individuals F1 (three times, in 2016) and M3 (four times, in 2017) utilized these forest patches to cross grassland areas. Fosas used patches at similar times as corridors (8.00–18.00). Activity counts for F1 and M3 reached a resting point (activity count = 0) in several forest patches while traversing grasslands.
Discussion
Fine-scale movements and activity patterns of collared fosas revealed several overall patterns in home range and habitat selection: (1) dry season home range sizes in Ankarafantsika National Park were much larger than documented for fosas in Kirindy Forest, another dry deciduous forest, or protected rainforests in eastern Madagascar, with varying degrees of overlap between individuals; (2) individuals generally avoided open habitats and villages; (3) all fosas utilized forest patches or corridors to cross deforested areas. Additionally, accelerometer data documented that fosas remained active when traversing non-forested areas.
Home ranges
The high degree of home range overlap among the three individuals collared in 2016 is similar to the pattern observed in Kirindy Forest (Lührs & Kappeler, Reference Lührs and Kappeler2013), with male home ranges overlapping those of females and other males. Previous studies at Kirindy documented males with larger home ranges than females (Hawkins, Reference Hawkins1998), whereas home range sizes for males and females were similar in Ankarafantsika National Park. Overlap patterns for collared individuals were very different across years; the reasons for this could not be determined because of the small sample size.
Home range sizes estimated by kernel densities in Ankarafantsika National Park far exceeded those reported in Kirindy during the same season (Hawkins, Reference Hawkins1998; Lührs & Kappeler, Reference Lührs and Kappeler2013). This could potentially be a result of the longer monitoring duration in our study (GPS-collared fosas were tracked for a maximum of 1 month by Lührs & Kappeler, Reference Lührs and Kappeler2013); however, fosas tracked via radio telemetry during both dry and wet seasons also had significantly smaller home ranges (Hawkins, Reference Hawkins1998). Larger fosa home ranges in Ankarafantsika National Park may reflect the fact that the landscape is more fragmented than in Kirindy. Prey availability could be lower in fragmented habitats, resulting in fosas requiring larger home ranges to meet their nutritional requirements (McNab, Reference McNab1963; Gittleman & Harvey, Reference Gittleman and Harvey1982). Habitat fragmentation appears to influence the distribution of at least two of the large-bodied lemurs in the Park (Propithecus coquereli and Lepilemur edwardsi), which historically comprised much of the fosa's diet (Dollar et al., Reference Dollar, Ganzhorn, Goodman, Gursky and Nekaris2007), and may also affect other lemurs in the region (e.g. Eulemur fulvus and Eulemur mongoz). Home range overlap documented for fosas in the Park suggests there may be intraspecific competition for prey (Craul et al., Reference Craul, Chikhi, Sousa, Olivieri, Rabesandratana, Zimmermann and Radespiel2009; Kun-Rodrigues et al., Reference Kun-Rodrigues, Salmona, Besolo, Rasolondraibe, Rabarivola, Marques and Chikhi2014).
Habitat selection and avoidance of villages
All collared individuals exhibited similar habitat selection for forest environments. Because their habitat is fragmented and their home ranges overlap, fosas in Ankarafantsika National Park are probably affected by the same villages, agricultural plots and deforested areas.
Habitat preferences varied slightly between individuals, but all generally avoided highly human-modified landscapes (agricultural areas and villages). All fosas used forest fragments, occupying edge habitat up to 2.5 km outside the Park boundary on several occasions. A recent camera-trap study in north-eastern Madagascar also reported open habitat avoidance, with similar habitat-use patterns outside contiguous forest patches (Farris et al., Reference Farris, Karpanty, Ratelolahy and Kelly2014), and work in central-eastern Madagascar documented fosa use of forest fragments up to 15 km from contiguous forests, with higher population density in fragments closer to contiguous forest habitats (Gerber et al., Reference Gerber, Karpanty and Randrianantenaina2012).
Fosas in the Park tended to avoid areas of human habitation, including areas with only a few buildings. If fosas preyed upon poultry or other domestic animals, they could be expected to select positively for village areas. There may be areas of human occupation too small to be visible in satellite images, or hidden by tree canopy, thus documenting village encroachment into the Park's forested areas at a fine scale is necessary to gain further insights into fosa interactions with livestock and humans. The individual (M2) that most frequently entered villages was killed by a vehicle on the RN4 road, confirming that motor traffic is a threat to fosas (Wyza et al., Reference Wyza, Dollar and Stevens2018).
Persecution and hunting threaten fosa populations (Farris et al., Reference Farris, Golden, Karpanty, Murphy, Stauffer and Ratelolahy2015b; Hawkins, Reference Hawkins2016) and occur mostly because people believe that fosas prey on poultry (Kotschwar Logan et al., Reference Kotschwar Logan, Gerber, Karpanty, Justin and Rabenahy2015). In our study, < 1% of all recorded locations of the three collared males were in villages, and females never entered villages. Furthermore, < 1% of all recorded locations were within a 30 m buffer around village areas, indicating that during our study fosas did not spend a significant amount of time in or near villages. The median distance (across all individuals) of recorded locations to the nearest village boundary was > 2 km, suggesting that fosas prefer the forest interior, rarely approach human settlements and probably do not rely on poultry as a major food source.
Activity patterns
Fosas in Ankarafantsika National Park did not appear to shift temporal activity patterns to avoid humans. A shift to more nocturnal activity patterns has been observed in other carnivore species in areas with frequent human activity. For example, brown bears Ursus arctos restrict active periods to twilight and night-time in areas with high road densities (Ordiz et al., Reference Ordiz, Kindberg, Sæbø, Swenson and Støen2014), and avoid humans by staying in areas of low human disturbance during times of high human activity (Martin et al., Reference Martin, Basile, Van Moorter, Kindberg, Allainé and Swenson2010). Lions Panthera leo in human-dominated landscapes alter prey preferences and shift temporal activity to avoid humans (Valeix et al., Reference Valeix, Hemson, Loveridge, Mills and Macdonald2012). Fosas generally exhibit an irregular activity pattern, so fine-scale alterations may be difficult to detect. Fosas in other protected areas have been reported to alter activity patterns to avoid non-native carnivores (Farris et al., Reference Farris, Gerber, Karpanty, Murphy, Andrianjakarivelo, Ratelolahy and Kelly2015a); however, fosas in Ankarafantsika National Park appear to exhibit irregular activity patterns with a preference for crepuscular hours, as documented in previous studies (Albignac, Reference Albignac1973; Hawkins, Reference Hawkins1998; Gerber et al., Reference Gerber, Karpanty and Randrianantenaina2012). The preference for crepuscular hours may reduce temporal overlap with humans, making it unnecessary for fosas to restrict their activities to nocturnal hours. A study in the Park that examined fosa and exotic carnivore activity patterns found fosas were active at different times compared to dogs and humans (Merson et al., Reference Merson, Dollar, Tan and Macdonald2018).
Fosas may also avoid humans and exotic carnivores by limiting extended resting periods to forest habitats. Almost all inactive positions recorded in our study were in the forest, suggesting fosas move through areas where they may encounter humans without extended pauses. Overall, our findings suggest that fosas primarily alter spatial rather than temporal activity patterns to avoid exotic carnivores or humans.
Use of forest corridors and patches
To our knowledge, this study is the first to document fosas habitually utilizing forest patches and corridors to traverse deforested areas. Previous camera-trap studies have recorded fosas in patchy forested areas, but the extent of use was unclear (Gerber et al., Reference Gerber, Karpanty and Randrianantenaina2012; Kotschwar Logan et al., Reference Kotschwar Logan, Gerber, Karpanty, Justin and Rabenahy2015).
Other forest-dependent carnivores utilize habitat patches and corridors to move across fragmented landscapes. The European pine marten Martes martes exhibits great plasticity in landscape use and has been observed traversing riparian corridors in heavily cultivated areas (Pereboom et al., Reference Pereboom, Mergey, Villerette, Helder, Gerard and Lode2008; Balestrieri et al., Reference Balestrieri, Remonti, Ruiz-Gonzalez, Zenato, Gazzola and Vergara2015). Fishers Martes pennanti habitually use forested corridors (LaPoint et al., Reference LaPoint, Gallery, Wikelski and Kays2013). The presence of corridors within fragmented landscapes appears critical for many forest-dwelling carnivores to maintain population connectivity and sufficient genetic diversity for long-term survival. The importance of corridors has been discussed in the context of climate change for both the American marten Martes americana (Wasserman et al., Reference Wasserman, Cushman, Littell, Shirk and Landguth2013) and the Canada lynx Lynx canadensis (Squires et al., Reference Squires, DeCesare, Olson, Kolbe, Hebblewhite and Parks2013).
If habitats are disconnected, forest-dependent species can become isolated and vulnerable to local extinction pressures (Schüßlera et al., Reference Schüßlera, Radespiel, Ratsimbazafy and Mantilla-Contreras2018). The fosa is already subject to isolation as a result of habitat fragmentation, particularly in western Madagascar where protected areas are situated among human-altered landscapes. Maintaining corridors within Ankarafantsika National Park, which hosts one of the last remaining viable fosa breeding populations, appears critical for population connectivity between its western and eastern sectors.
Conservation implications
In conclusion, our results suggest fosas respond to human encroachment by using forest corridors and patches to traverse a fragmented forest landscape. They appear to avoid human-dominated areas, but their large home ranges in Ankarafantsika National Park may reflect prey scarcity and competition with non-native carnivores such as domestic cats and dogs, and small Indian civets. Non-native carnivores collectively represented 42% of the carnivores trapped during our study, and additional individuals were observed on camera traps. The fosa's behaviour may be more flexible than previously thought, allowing the species to persist despite human disturbance, at least in the short term. Long-term viability will depend on a mixed strategy of maintaining and developing functional connectivity amongst fosa populations, whereby even modest forest corridors can facilitate dispersal and gene flow. If fosas in other areas of Madagascar show similar activity patterns as the ones tracked in our study, persecution could be reduced by sharing data on fosa diet and ranging patterns with local stakeholders, and carefully monitoring any threats fosas pose to local livelihoods. Although fosas appear to tolerate human encroachment to a degree and generally avoid areas of human habitation, dwindling and increasingly fragmented forests, together with competition from non-native carnivores, present ongoing threats to the species’ persistence and increase the risk that Madagascar's apex predator will vanish from the island's ecosystems.
Acknowledgements
We acknowledge funding for GPS collars from Naples Zoo and Collier Schools in Naples, USA. National Geographic Society supported LJD; Voinovich School of Leadership and Public Affairs at OHIO supported EW graduate funding and NJS project support. G. Dabelko contributed to project design. Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, Ohio, provided NJS research infrastructure and support. We thank the Editor and reviewers for their critiques. This paper is dedicated to the memory of colleague and co-author LPR.
Author contributions
Study design: NJS, EW, LJD; provision of radio-collars: LJD; organization of permissions, logistical support: LD, LPR; fieldwork: EW, LD, LPR; data analysis: EW, VP; writing: EW, NJS.
Conflicts of interest
None.
Ethical standards
This research abided by the Oryx guidelines on ethical standards. Permits were acquired to conduct field work in Ankarafantsika National Park in accordance with an Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee protocol regarding capture of animals (Protocol #17-H-013).