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The Project
Despite the unique ecology and enigmatic evolutionary history
of Malagasy carnivores, members of this family have been the
subject of few in-depth field studies. The carnivores of Madagascar,
like many other members of the island’s biota, display
a particularly high degree of endemism among modern taxa.
Seven of the eight species of carnivore found on Madagascar
have no extant representatives anywhere else in the world.
No felid, hyaenid, and canid representatives are commonly
recognized within Madagascar’s endemic mammalian predator
guild. As in most biodiversity hotspots, non-endemic species
encroach upon the natural habitats of Madagascar’s top
endemic predator. Investigating and identifying how both endemic
and invasive predators divide their resources and otherwise
affect one another provides significant information to increase
our understanding of both ecological and conservation issues
in Madagascar and abroad.
In the absence of additional endemic carnivore competitors,
the eight viverrid and herpestid carnivore species found on
Madagascar must fill a particularly broad range of niches.
Galidia elegans, and its allies Galidictis,
Salanoia, and Mungotictis, represent the
herpestid stock and Eupleres, Fossa, and
Cryptoprocta represent the viverrids. Volunteers
should note that the common name of Cryptoprocta
is fossa, which also happens to be the scientific name of
a different genus, Fossa. This has been a long-standing
point of confusion. Henceforth in this proposal, when I use
the term fossa, I am referring to the common name of Cryptoprocta.
The current conservation status of the Malagasy carnivores,
noted by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature
and Natural Resources, ranges from “vulnerable”
to “unknown,” and many of these species are targeted
for persecution by indigenous human populations and continue
to decline in numbers. Carnivore populations have been identified
in more than twenty protected areas throughout Madagascar
(Kohncke and Leonhart 1986), but most of these populations
have not been monitored for almost thirty years.
The focal site for this proposed project is the Ampijoroa
Research Station and its surrounding area in Ankarafantsika
National Park, Madagascar. This project consists of trapping
surveys of carnivore populations to estimate their current
distributions and relative abundances. Our study focuses on
an in-depth examination of the natural history and behavioral
ecology of Madagascar’s largest carnivore, the puma-like
Cryptoprocta ferox, commonly known as the fossa.
Only three species of Malagasy carnivore are thought to occur
at Ampijoroa. These are Cryptoprocta, a recently
discovered (yet taxonomically unidentified) species of Wild
Cat, and the smaller, non-endemic Viverricula indica.
We are particularly interested in how invasive, competing
species affect the behavioral ecology of the large, endemic
Cryptoprocta.
The trapping portion of the research project, in which volunteers
most actively assist is merely a portion of the research and
conservation activities that are included in this project’s
priorities. Research pursuits associated with this project
range from natural history to veterinary to genetic studies.
In addition, the presence of our well-established field team
also lends assistance to and promotes the development of other
biodiversity studies in the region. The conservation aspect
of this work ranges from direct wildlife based educational
activities and community outreach to the development of multiple
sustainable alternatives to traditional activities that previously
contributed to Madagascar’s current biodiversity crisis.
Our conservation and research efforts are in close collaboration
with ANGAP, the Department of Water and Forests of Madagascar,
the Institute for the Conservation of Tropical Environments,
Conservation International, the World Wildlife Fund, and the
University of Antananarivo, among other entities currently
active throughout the region.
Our research provides baseline assessments of current carnivore
populations including data on their behavior, abundance and
distributions in Ankarafantsika National Park in addition
to an established monitoring program on the overall biodiversity
of Ankarafantsika. This has established and facilitates long-term
monitoring of these populations. In this way, we are developing
important scientific results and also help ensure the conservation
and maintenance of the endangered species and habitat of Ankarafantiksa
and the surrounding Mahajunga basin.
research objectives
| methods | application
of results
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