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Virginia Tech student’s research reveals new, troubling threats to Madagascar wildlife

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L_madagascar04Habitat degradation and deforestation are recognized as principal threats to wildlife globally but have especially destructive implications on the island nation of Madagascar, where four out of five of the plant and animal species are found nowhere else in the world.

But a Virginia Tech graduate student’s camera-trap project reveals that unsustainable hunting practices and human-associated predators, including dogs and cats, are responsible for range contractions and possible population declines of native species — even if the forest is intact and protected — leaving behind a phenomenon biologists call an “empty forest.”

Asia Murphy of Sacramento, California, a wildlife conservation master’s student in the College of Natural Resources and Environment, worked in Madagascar’s Masoala-Makira protected area complex, the largest tract of intact rainforest remaining on the island off the east coast of Africa. Her work elaborated on a five-year-study launched by her co-advisor Marcella Kelly and augmented by co-advisor Sarah Karpanty, both associate professors of wildlife in the college’s Department of Fish and Wildlife Conservation. Kelly is also a Fralin Life Science Institute affiliate.

The larger project logged more than 16,000 trap nights — the equivalent of one camera station running for nearly 45 years. Researchers, including Virginia Tech graduate students, observed 1,000 lemur individuals during 420 surveys at six sites, and walked over 800 kilometers of line transects — nearly half the north-to-south length of Madagascar.

The project is one of only a few efforts to study lemurs for longer than five years in northeastern Madagascar, and Murphy’s work was the first to study the effect of habitat degradation, principally caused by deforestation for rice production, on lemurs and birds.

Collecting camera-trap data in both intact and degraded forests, Murphy determined how habitat degradation and the presence of exotic predators affected 23 species of lemurs, tenrecs (small mammals native to Madagascar), and ground-dwelling forest birds. Of those species, seven are listed as either endangered or critically endangered.

“But habitat loss isn’t the only problem and might not even be the biggest problem facing conservation,” Murphy said. Even in intact forest sites, she determined that 80 percent of the species she monitored showed range contractions at the sites surveyed.

As part of the larger project, Murphy’s colleague, Zachary Farris, who earned his doctorate from Virginia Tech in 2014 and was also co-advised by Kelly and Karpanty, recognized that local residents, in order to supplement their protein-deficient diets, hunt in intact forests where carnivores are present, because hunting is easier.

“We can stretch and say ‘They hunt where more carnivores, lemurs, birds, and tenrecs are present,’ but we don’t yet have the results to support that,” Murphy said. “I’ll be working on that next, in collaboration with Christopher Golden of the Wildlife Conservation Society and the Harvard School of Public Health,” who studies unsustainable hunting practices and provided the hunting data for Farris.

Likening hunting in an intact forest to choosing a grocery store, Murphy said, “If you want to get some food, you don’t go to a store that barely has anything on the shelf. You go to a store with stocked shelves so you can choose what you want, and you can get as much as you want.”

Farris also found that invasive carnivores — including domestic dogs, feral cats, and the introduced small Indian civet — were often found in high numbers in intact forests, increasing the chances of negative interactions between native and invasive carnivores. In particular, Farris determined that the threatened Malagasy civet, a native carnivore that looks like a small, spotted fox, was less common in areas with high rates of feral cat activity.

Murphy’s work elaborated on the negative influence of feral cats, discovering that when feral cats were present, the likelihood of finding native bird species like the red-breasted coua, the scaly ground-roller, and the Madagascar crested ibis, which is listed as near-threatened, was reduced.

Murphy describes her findings as providing a more 3-D view of the loss of wildlife occurring in the protected Masoala-Makira forests. “Although there is plenty of forest out there, wild populations still seem to be declining, including in intact forests,” she explained. “We’re seeing that it’s not only the carnivores and lemurs, which are very charismatic and relatively well-studied, that are being threatened by habitat degradation, hunting, and non-native species; it’s the birds and tenrecs, too.”

To slow declines in native wild populations, Murphy recommends integrated socioeconomic measures such as improving food security, increasing access to birth control, and emphasizing the inclusion of locals at every level of wildlife management, including the encouragement of locally led conservation and research initiatives. Exotic predators such as feral cats also need to be removed from the forests, and village cats should be spayed or neutered.

Dedicated to communicating complex science to a broad audience, Murphy plans to launch a website on Aug. 1 and is also on Twitter. “Anatiala” means “in the forest” in Malagasy, the language of Madagascar. “I hope to take nonscientists inside the forest and show them the realities of wildlife conservation and research in an international setting,” she said.

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