Poaching-related disappearance rate of wolves in Sweden was positively related to population size and negatively to legal culling
Liberg, Olof; Suutarinen, Johanna; Åkesson, Mikael; Andrén, Henrik; Wabakken, Petter; Wikenros, Camilla; Sand, Håkan
Peer reviewed, Journal article
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Date
2020-03-14Metadata
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Abstract
Poaching is an important limiting factor for many large carnivore populations worldwide and the effect that legal culling has on poaching rate on wolf (Canis lupus) is debated. We used data linked to population monitoring and research to analyze rate and risk of disappearance without known cause for territorial pair-living wolves (n = 444) in Sweden 2000/01–2016/17. Known mortalities included legal kills (n = 103), natural causes (n = 23), traffic (n = 8) and verified poaching (n = 20) but most (n = 189) wolves disappeared without known cause. Careful evaluation of alternative causes supported the assumption that poaching was the most likely reason for the majority of these disappearances. Disappearance rate was0.14 for the entire study period, and increased from 0.09 in 2000/01–2009/10 to 0.21 in 2010/11–2016/17, while a Kaplan-Meier analysis on a subsample of radio collared wolves (n = 77) gave an average annual poaching rate of 0.12 for the entire study period and 0.10 and 0.18 for the corresponding two sub-periods. Factors affecting disappearance rate were modeled using logistic regression and Cox proportional hazards regression. Population size had a strong positive effect on disappearance rate in both models, whereas legal culling rate had a negative effect, significant only in the Cox model. The combined effect of legal culling rate and disappearance rate during the latter part of our study period has halted population growth. Our results contribute to an increased understanding of two vital drivers predicted to affect poaching rate: population size and legal culling.