Affiliations 

  • 1 Department of Zoology Wildlife Conservation Research Unit University of Oxford The Recanati-Kaplan Centre Abingdon United Kingdom
  • 2 Institute of Ecology and Evolution Friedrich-Schiller University of Jena Germany
  • 3 Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics American Museum of Natural History New York NY USA
  • 4 World Wild Fund for Nature Cambodia Phnom Penh Cambodia
  • 5 Tigers Alive Initiative WWF-Malaysia Kuala Lumpur Malaysia
  • 6 Ministry of Environment Phnom Penh Cambodia
  • 7 Swiss Ornithological Institute Sempach Switzerland
Ecol Evol, 2021 May;11(9):4205-4217.
PMID: 33976804 DOI: 10.1002/ece3.7316

Abstract

Dry deciduous dipterocarp forests (DDF) cover about 15%-20% of Southeast Asia and are the most threatened forest type in the region. The jungle cat (Felis chaus) is a DDF specialist that occurs only in small isolated populations in Southeast Asia. Despite being one of the rarest felids in the region, almost nothing is known about its ecology. We investigated the ecology of jungle cats and their resource partitioning with the more common leopard cats (Prionailurus bengalensis) in a DDF-dominated landscape in Srepok Wildlife Sanctuary, Cambodia. We used camera-trap data collected from 2009 to 2019 and DNA-confirmed scats to determine the temporal, dietary and spatial overlap between jungle cats and leopard cats. The diet of jungle cats was relatively diverse and consisted of murids (56% biomass consumed), sciurids (15%), hares (Lepus peguensis; 12%), birds (8%), and reptiles (8%), whereas leopard cats had a narrower niche breadth and a diet dominated by smaller prey, primarily murids (73%). Nonetheless, dietary overlap was high because both felid species consumed predominantly small rodents. Both species were primarily nocturnal and had high temporal overlap. Two-species occupancy modelling suggested jungle cats were restricted to DDF and had low occupancy, whereas leopard cats had higher occupancy and were habitat generalists. Our study confirmed that jungle cats are DDF specialists that likely persist in low numbers due to the harsh conditions of the dry season in this habitat, including annual fires and substantial decreases in small vertebrate prey. The lower occupancy and more diverse diet of jungle cats, together with the broader habitat use of leopard cats, likely facilitated the coexistence of these species. The low occupancy of jungle cats in DDF suggests that protection of large areas of DDF will be required for the long-term conservation of this rare felid in Southeast Asia.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.