Communications Biology (Oct 2024)

Rangers on the frontline of wildlife monitoring: a case study on African lions in Uganda’s Nile Delta

  • Alexander R. Braczkowski,
  • Lilian Namukose,
  • Silvan Musobozi,
  • Orin Cornille,
  • Tutilo Mudumba,
  • Gilbert Drileyo,
  • Femke Broekhuis,
  • Sophia Jingo,
  • Brenda Asimwe,
  • Peter Luhonda,
  • Bosco Atukwatse,
  • Christopher J. O’Bryan,
  • Hamish McCallum,
  • Duan Biggs,
  • Luke Gibson,
  • Aggrey Rwetsiba,
  • Arjun M. Gopalaswamy,
  • Peter Lindsey,
  • Nicholas Elliot

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06796-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Regular population monitoring of imperilled charismatic species such as large carnivores is critical for conservation. However, the role of monitoring in conservation is frequently diminished due to: 1) surveys being implemented in isolation, 2) limited on-ground-capacity leading to infrequent monitoring, and 3) inappropriate methods being applied. Wildlife monitoring is often resource-intensive and the utility and cost of different field protocols is rarely reported. In this study we deployed two standard field protocols aimed at collecting data on African lions within a spatial capture-recapture framework. For our first protocol, we trained Uganda Wildlife Authority rangers in search-encounter techniques, the industry gold standard for monitoring lions. The second protocol involved deploying 32 paired stations of state-of-the-art infra-red camera traps. During the search-encounter protocol, two rangers covered 2939 km in 76 days, recording 102 detections (30 individuals) in a ~ 256 km2 area. The resulting density estimates (13.91 lions/100 km2, posterior SD = 2.34) yielded acceptable precision. Conversely, 64 camera traps over 1601 trap nights yielded two usable lion detections. We argue that where wildlife tourism rangers exist, they could be a powerful addition to future lion and wildlife census attempts across the continent. Our results confirm that the current technology of store-bought infra-red camera traps is not suitable for individual identification of lions, and therefore cannot be applied to analytical models that require unambiguous individual identities. However, we encourage the continued testing and advancement of infra-red camera trap technology since in many instances, this may be preferable to white-flash camera traps, which can yield individual identities for lions. Our study also shows the immense importance of the Nile Delta for African lions in Uganda’s Murchison Falls National Park, a protected area with both oil extraction and high rates of anthropogenic snaring pressure.