Journal of Threatened Taxa (Feb 2018)

Observations of occurrence and daily activity patterns of ungulates in the Endau Rompin Landscape, peninsular Malaysia

  • Win Sim Tan,
  • Norazmi bin Amir Hamzah,
  • Salman Saaban,
  • Nurul Aida Zawakhir,
  • Yugees Rao,
  • Norolhuda Jamaluddin,
  • Francis Cheong,
  • Norhidayati binti Khalid,
  • Nur Iadiah Mohd Saat,
  • Eka Nadia binti Zaidee Ee,
  • Azwan bin Hamdan,
  • Mei Mei Chow,
  • Chee Pheng Low,
  • Mufeng Voon,
  • Song Horng Liang,
  • Martin Tyson,
  • Melvin Terry Gumal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.11609/jott.3519.10.2.11245-11253
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
pp. 11245 – 11253

Abstract

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Camera trap data was used to study occurrence and daily activity patterns in the Endau Rompin Landscape of peninsular Malaysia during 2011, 2013 and 2015 to estimate Malayan Tiger Panthera tigris jacksoni population densities. By-catch data were also collected for seven ungulate species: Barking Deer Muntiacus muntjak, Bearded Pig Sus barbatus, Wild Boar Sus scrofa, Greater Mousedeer Tragulus napu, Lesser Mousedeer Tragulus kanchil, Malayan Tapir Tapirus indicus and Sambar Deer Rusa unicolor. Of these, Bayesian single-season occupancy analysis suggested that Barking Deer were the most widespread and Mousedeer spp. the least widespread during the study period. Bearded Pig, Malayan Tapir and Wild Boar were recorded in more than half of the camera trap area (Sambar Deer was excluded due to small sample size). Daily activity patterns based on independent captures in 2015 suggest that Barking Deer, Bearded Pig and Wild Boar are mostly diurnal, mousedeer species are crepuscular and Malayan Tapir strongly nocturnal.

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