Introduction
An increasing human population and the conversion of land for anthropogenic activities have resulted in widespread conflict between humans and wildlife, and this is predicted to increase (Hutton & Leader-Williams, Reference Hutton and Leader-Williams2003; Madden, Reference Madden2004). Actual or perceived depredation of livestock by carnivores is the most common cause of conflict between humans and predators (Sillero-Zubiri & Laurenson, Reference Sillero-Zubiri, Laurenson, Gittleman, Funk, Macdonald and Wayne2001), and human intolerance and lethal removal of predators constitute one of the primary threats to the survival of nearly all large carnivore species (Woodroffe et al., Reference Woodroffe, Thirgood, Rabinowitz, Woodroffe, Thirgood and Rabinowitz2005). The capture and translocation of problem individuals from the conflict site to another area within the species’ range (IUCN, 1998) is thought to reduce livestock losses. Translocation is considered a humane method (Massei et al., Reference Massei, Quy, Gurney and Cowan2010), and therefore conservation organizations may be under pressure to translocate problem individuals to prevent them being killed.
The majority of large carnivore species have been translocated to mitigate human–predator conflict (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Aanes and Swenson1997; Fontúrbel & Simonetti, Reference Fontúrbel and Simonetti2011), including the successful reintroduction and establishment of healthy populations of grey wolf Canis lupus, cheetah Acinonyx jubatus and lion Panthera leo (Bradley et al., Reference Bradley, Pletscher, Bangs, Krunkel, Smith and Mack2005; Purchase et al., Reference Purchase, Vhurumuku and Purchase2006; Hayward et al., Reference Hayward, Adendorff, O'Brien, Sholto-Douglas, Bissett and Moolman2007). However, high mortality rates, and incidences of homing behaviour and of reverting to livestock predation have also been reported (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Aanes and Swenson1997).
The reduction of conflict at the capture site should be considered the primary indicator of success for translocations to mitigate human–predator conflict but often the effect of translocations on conflict resolution is not documented (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Aanes and Swenson1997; Massei et al., Reference Massei, Quy, Gurney and Cowan2010). Translocated individuals should have an acceptable chance of survival, defined by Fontúrbel & Simonetti (Reference Fontúrbel and Simonetti2011) as surviving 1 year post release. Translocation should be cost-effective relative to other available conflict mitigation methods (Massei et al., Reference Massei, Quy, Gurney and Cowan2010); however, the costs of translocation are rarely reported (Fischer & Lindenmayer, Reference Fischer and Lindenmayer2000). We discuss the success of a cheetah translocation programme in Botswana in the context of the aforementioned criteria. Questionnaire surveys were used to investigate farmers’ perceptions of the efficacy of translocation at reducing stock losses to carnivore depredation, and this information was considered alongside information on the survival of translocated cheetahs. The cheetah is the most threatened large felid in Africa, and Botswana is geographically at the centre of the southern African cheetah population, the largest remaining population (IUCN/SSC, 2007).
Study area
Botswana is a landlocked country in southern Africa (581,730 km2; Fig. 1), with mean temperatures of 35°C in summer and 1°C in winter, and annual rainfall of c. 200–600 mm, during October–March (Central Statistics Office, 2013). The vegetation varies from scrub savannah and small trees in the drier south-west to tree savannah and woodland in the north-east, where there is more precipitation (Burgess, Reference Burgess2003).
Land use is divided into livestock/game-stock farmland, arable and pastoral land (58.2%), wildlife management areas (22.1%; designed primarily for wildlife conservation but also contain livestock), nationally protected parks and reserves (19.1%), and city land and government ranches (0.6%; Fig. 1; Central Statistics Office, 2013). Protected areas do not have predator-proof fencing (with the exception of the south-western boundary of the Makgadikgadi National Park), and therefore movement of predators is largely unrestricted.
Questionnaire surveys of farmers were conducted primarily in the Central, Ghanzi, Ngamiland and North-East regional districts. Translocated problem cheetahs originated from the Ghanzi, Southern or Kgalagadi districts, in western Botswana, where a local conservation organization, Cheetah Conservation Botswana, has an active presence. Cheetahs were translocated to protected areas, wildlife management areas or farmland in this western region (Fig. 1).
Methods
Questionnaires
Questionnaires were administered as face-to-face interviews with game-stock and livestock farmers (n = 115; refusal rate 12.1%) during 2012–2013. Farmers were asked if they had ever translocated a predator from their property and, if so, how effective (very effective, effective, ineffective, very ineffective, do not know) they perceived the translocation had been at reducing stock losses to carnivore depredation in the short (≤ 3 months) and long term (> 3 months). They were also asked how likely they would be to translocate a predator in the future (very likely, likely, unlikely, very unlikely, do not know) and to explain why. Any additional comments farmers made regarding predator translocations were recorded, as were details of the most recent translocation event. If a farmer was unable to remember the year the translocation took place it was assumed to have occurred > 12 months prior to the survey.
All Department of Wildlife and National Parks offices in Botswana (n = 25) were contacted and asked to provide records of predator translocations conducted during 2010–2012, including the contact details of the farmers involved. These farmers were contacted by telephone and asked the same questions regarding predator translocations.
Capture and translocation of cheetahs
Cheetahs were captured during January 2003–May 2011, and a physical health check was carried out on adult individuals, as described in Houser et al. (Reference Houser, Somers and Boast2009) and Boast et al. (Reference Boast, Houser, Good and Gusset2013). The majority of cheetahs were caught by farmers using their own traps. Cheetahs were transported to Cheetah Conservation Botswana research bases and held for a median of 4 days before release (range 0–16 days, n = 21).
Cheetahs were rated as being in excellent, good, fair or poor health; superficial trap-cage injuries were noted but were not considered in the assessment of health status (Marker & Dickman, Reference Marker and Dickman2003). A global positioning system (GPS) cell collar (Africa Wildlife Tracking cc, Pretoria, South Africa; 450 g) or GPS satellite collar (Sirtrack Limited, Havelock North, New Zealand; 310 g) was fitted to cheetahs during the physical health check. GPS locations were recorded 2–4 times per day, and visual follow-up was not conducted.
Release sites were selected through discussion between Department of Wildlife and National Parks and Cheetah Conservation Botswana staff at the time of capture; selections were based on vegetation, the availability of water and prey, the presence or absence of larger competitors (lion and spotted hyaena Crocuta crocuta), the cheetahs’ social grouping, and the threat the cheetahs were thought to pose to livestock. Cheetahs were hard-released at the chosen site.
Survival and post-release movements of translocated cheetahs
Survival time of collared cheetahs was calculated as the number of days between their release (day 0) and death or collar failure (day χ). The success rate was defined as the proportion of individuals that survived 1 year (Fontúrbel & Simonetti, Reference Fontúrbel and Simonetti2011). Spatial analyses were performed in ArcView GIS 3.2 (ESRI, Redlands, USA). Daily movements were monitored and, if applicable, the time taken for individuals to return to their capture site was recorded. A cheetah was considered to have returned to the capture site if a GPS location was recorded within 23.4 km of the site at which it was trapped. This is equivalent to the radius of the mean cheetah home range on farmland in Namibia, calculated based on 41 individuals (Marker et al., Reference Marker, Dickman, Mills, Jeo and Macdonald2008). The Namibian home range was chosen because the home range calculated for Botswana (radius 11.4 km; Houser et al., Reference Houser, Somers and Boast2009) was based on a sample of only five individuals. Release-site fidelity was defined as an individual utilizing an area within 23.4 km of the release site more than once, > 60 days after release.
Statistical analyses
Questionnaire data were coded for use in SPSS v. 11.0.1 (IBM Corporation, Armonk, USA). Statistical tests included the Mann–Whitney U test, Wilcoxon signed-rank test and χ2 tests (using Yates's correction factor). Content analysis was used to identify consistent themes in the additional comments farmers made regarding translocation. Significance was determined at P = 0.05.
Results
Questionnaires
In the questionnaire survey 26.1% (n = 115) of farmers indicated they had been involved in the translocation of a problem predator. Predators were equally likely to have been translocated from ranches farming only game-stock (16.3% of ranches had translocated a predator, n = 43), livestock farms (29.6%, n = 27) or farms stocking both livestock and game-stock (27.0%, n = 37; χ2 = 1.48, df = 2, P = 0.477). An additional 24 questionnaires were conducted with farmers identified from Department of Wildlife and National Parks records as having participated in translocation of a predator; in total, 54 people who had experience of translocations were questioned. The median time between translocation and interview was 2 years (n = 48, range 0.25–28.00 years); an additional six farmers could not remember the year the translocation took place. Farmers had translocated leopards Panthera pardus (55.5%), lions (25.9%), cheetahs (16.7%), brown hyaenas Hyaena brunnea (9.3%), black-backed jackals Canis mesomelas (1.9%), African wild dogs Lycaon pictus (1.9%) and spotted hyaenas (1.9%).
Fifty-seven percent of farmers perceived that translocation was effective at reducing their stock losses in the short term (57.1%; n = 49), compared to 46.9% (n = 49) in the long term (U(48), z = −1.63, P = 0.102; Table 1). Farmers’ perceptions of efficacy did not vary with the species farmed, the reason for translocation or the species translocated. However, farmers who had translocated a predator within the 12 months prior to the study were up to 1.7 times less likely to rate the translocation as very effective or effective at reducing stock losses (short term: 40.9% of farmers; long term: 36.4%; n = 22) than farmers who had translocated a predator > 12 months prior to the study (short term: 70.4%, n = 27; U(49), z = −2.15, P = 0.032; long term: 55.6%, n = 27; U(49), z = −1.63, P = 0.104; Table 1). Five farmers responded that they did not know how effective the translocation was.
Eighty-five percent (84.6%) of farmers who had translocated a predator indicated they were very likely or likely to consider translocating predators in the future (n = 52), compared to 50.0% of farmers who had never been involved in predator translocation (n = 80; χ2 = 18.85, df = 1, P < 0.001). Twenty percent (20.2%) of farmers who commented on predator translocation did not want to translocate predators in the future, as they wanted to have predators on the farm (n = 129; Supplementary Table S1). Other reasons farmers stated as to why they would not translocate a predator in the future or why they thought translocation was ineffective were that predators are not moved far enough away (6.2%), they return to the farm (16.3%) or they do not survive after release (12.4%). Farmers also reported that other predator species (6.2%) or new individuals moved into the area (4.7%) and killed livestock or game-stock, and that in some cases stock losses to predators increased after translocation (3.9%; Supplementary Table S1). Farmers were also concerned that there was nowhere to move the predators to because protected areas were unsuitable or at full capacity (7.8%), and that the Department of Wildlife and National Parks and conservation NGOs were slow to respond and did not treat animals humanely (10.1%) or were unwilling to assist in translocating predators (7.8%).
Translocation of cheetahs
Cheetah Conservation Botswana took part in the translocation of 21 social groups of cheetahs (39 individuals) during 2003–2011. Male coalitions were the most commonly translocated group (47.6%), followed by single males (28.6%), females with cubs (19.0%), and single females (4.8%). Of the cheetahs that underwent a physical health check 88% (n = 26) were deemed to be in excellent or good health; the remaining cheetahs were in fair health. Minor to moderate trap-cage injuries, including abrasions to paws, face, shoulders, base of tail and hips, were recorded in 60% (n = 25) of adults. The costs of translocation varied depending on how and where the cheetah was captured, the social grouping, veterinarian fees, the release point, and the follow-up conducted. The estimated cost to translocate a single problem cheetah was USD 7,110, 78.5% of which related to post-release monitoring and the physical health check (Table 2). The mean linear distance between capture and release sites was 138 ± SD 75 km (n = 21).
* Costs do not include initial material costs such as traps, holding pens, vehicles, squeeze boxes, and darting and medical equipment.
Survival and post-release movements of translocated cheetahs
GPS cell (n = 4) or satellite collars (n = 7) were fitted to 11 adult cheetahs. Median survival time was 106 days (range 46–981) for males and 31 days (range 21–95) for females (Table 3). Only two individuals survived for longer than 1 year, yielding a success rate of 18.2% (n = 11); however, a third survived for 347 days (Table 3). Three of the four individuals whose release sites were < 50 km from their point of capture returned to the capture site, and one showed fidelity to the release site. Of the seven cheetahs translocated > 50 km from the capture site, one returned to the capture area and one showed site fidelity to the release site (Table 3). A calf carcass and cheetah spoor were found at a location recorded from the GPS collar of a translocated male cheetah.
1 CKGR, Central Kalahari Game Reserve; KTP, Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park; WMA, Wildlife Management Area
2 Defined as an individual utilizing an area within 23.4 km of the release site more than once > 60 days after release
3 Defined as a recorded GPS location within 23.4 km (radius of mean home range size; Marker et al., Reference Marker, Dickman, Mills, Jeo and Macdonald2008) of the capture site
4 Released separately
Discussion
Reduction of human–predator conflict at the capture site
Quantitative data on stock losses that occurred before and after predators were translocated were not available, and the few studies that have reported data have been conflicting and often inconclusive (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Aanes and Swenson1997). The drivers of human–predator conflict are often related to farmers’ perceptions of predators and the threat and fear of economic losses rather than actual stock losses (Gusset et al., Reference Gusset, Swarner, Mponwane, Keletile and McNutt2009), and therefore we considered farmers’ attitudes to predator translocation an appropriate measure to gauge its effectiveness at reducing stock losses and mitigating human–predator conflict.
Overall 57.1% of farmers perceived that translocation was effective at reducing stock losses in the short term; this decreased to 40.9% if farmers who had translocated a predator > 1 year ago were excluded. Memories can be biased by what is known as rosy retrospection, in which individuals rate past events more positively than they would have rated them when the event occurred (Mitchell & Thompson, Reference Mitchell, Thompson, Stubbart, Porac and Meindl1994). It is possible this bias accounts for the observed differences, and therefore overall perceived effectiveness would probably have been lower if follow-up had been conducted nearer the time of translocation.
Farmers reported that translocation was ineffective, as other predators in the area or new predators that moved into the area continued to prey on livestock. The translocation of problem predators relies on the assumption that problem individuals (ones that repeatedly kill livestock) exist and can be identified and captured (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Aanes and Swenson1997; Linnell, Reference Linnell2011). If problem animals do not exist, however, or if the wrong individual is captured, livestock depredation is likely to continue. Additionally, the removal of territorial individuals has been associated with an increase in the number of subadult or transient individuals in an area (Phillips et al., Reference Phillips, Cummings and Berry1991; Athreya, Reference Athreya2006), which could result in increased stock losses. Five farmers reported that their problems with predators increased after the translocation of a predator (Supplementary Table S1).
Farmers also commented that predation continues when translocated predators are not moved far enough away and are able to return to the capture site. Carnivores possess an intrinsic ability to navigate to their home area (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Aanes and Swenson1997); only two of the 11 collared cheetahs remained at the release site and four returned to their capture site. It is generally assumed that large carnivores are unlikely to return if they are moved > 100 km (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Aanes and Swenson1997). However, instances of long-distance homing such as that recorded for cheetah 11, which returned to its capture site from 170 km away (Table 3), have also been recorded for mountain lions Puma concolor, leopards, wolves and bears, and present a challenge when choosing release sites (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Aanes and Swenson1997; Weilenmann et al., Reference Weilenmann, Gusset, Mills, Gabanapelo and Schiess-Meier2010).
Survival of translocated cheetahs
Cheetahs have all the characteristics necessary for translocation: they consume a broad range of prey species, can tolerate a variety of habitats, and have an exploratory nature (Caro, Reference Caro1994). However, cheetahs generally have lower survival rates than other translocated carnivores (Hayward et al., Reference Hayward, Adendorff, O'Brien, Sholto-Douglas, Bissett and Moolman2007); the post-release success rate of 18.2% reported here is substantially lower than that reported in a review of felid translocations (39 ± SD 21%; Fontúrbel & Simonetti, Reference Fontúrbel and Simonetti2011). The low survival rate in this study was likely to have been exacerbated by the hard-release of cheetahs into unfenced areas (Somers & Gusset, Reference Somers, Gusset, Hayward and Somers2009). Sixty-seven percent of cheetahs in this study and 47% of translocated felids in a review of predator translocations to mitigate human–predator conflict died within 110 days of release (Fontúrbel & Simonetti, Reference Fontúrbel and Simonetti2011). During the first 110 days, predators may be trying to return to the capture site or to establish themselves in the new area. Soft-release, where animals are held in a temporary holding enclosure at the release site to acclimatize them to the area before their release, can reduce post-release movements (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Aanes and Swenson1997) and has been associated with increased survival rates (Massei et al., Reference Massei, Quy, Gurney and Cowan2010). A higher success rate was recorded in the soft-release of cheetahs into Matusadona National Park (36.0%; Purchase & Vhurumuku, Reference Purchase and Vhurumuku2005) compared to this study (18.2%). Soft-release of cheetahs into private reserves with predator-proof fencing in South Africa has also had a high success rate (83%; Marnewick et al., Reference Marnewick, Hayward, Cilliers, Somers, Hayward and Somers2009); this can be attributed to the increased availability of post-release monitoring and veterinary treatment during the initial 110 days, and to the predators’ inability to leave the relative safety of the reserve. Soft-release programmes are expensive, however, and despite the potential survival benefits of soft-release most predator translocation programmes are based on hard-release (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Aanes and Swenson1997; Fontúrbel & Simonetti, Reference Fontúrbel and Simonetti2011).
The availability of food and shelter, and a low presence of competitors, including humans, are thought to be the most important factors determining the survival of translocated animals (Fischer & Lindenmayer, Reference Fischer and Lindenmayer2000; Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Mengersen, de Waal, Marnewick, Cilliers, Houser and Boast2010; Massei et al., Reference Massei, Quy, Gurney and Cowan2010). In this study three of nine cheetahs that were confirmed dead were shot on farmland, and human-related causes were suspected in three other cases; human-mediated death is reported as the overall leading cause of mortality in predator translocations (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Aanes and Swenson1997; Massei et al., Reference Massei, Quy, Gurney and Cowan2010; Fontúrbel & Simonetti, Reference Fontúrbel and Simonetti2011). The cause of death could not be confirmed in the other cases because of the lack of visual follow-up and the time delay in reaching the dead cheetahs, which is a common problem when animals are released into unfenced areas (Wolf et al., Reference Wolf, Griffith, Reed and Temple1996). The poor survival of the three cheetahs released into the Central Kalahari Game Reserve (21–66 days; Table 3) may have been related to the high density of lions at the release sites, as lions have been largely extirpated from the capture sites (Winterbach, Reference Winterbach2008). Pre-release exposure to predators has been shown to increase survival of translocated individuals (Griffin et al., Reference Griffin, Blumstein and Evans2000), and the naivety of the translocated cheetahs regarding lions may have contributed to their low survival rate (Bissett & Bernard, Reference Bissett and Bernard2007; Hayward et al., Reference Hayward, Adendorff, O'Brien, Sholto-Douglas, Bissett and Moolman2007; Marnewick et al., Reference Marnewick, Hayward, Cilliers, Somers, Hayward and Somers2009).
Intraspecific competition has also been recorded as a cause of death in the translocation of cheetahs to electric-fenced game ranches in South Africa (Hofmeyr & Van Dyk, Reference Hofmeyr and Van Dyk1998; Bissett & Bernard, Reference Bissett and Bernard2007), and between wild territorial males in the Serengeti (Caro, Reference Caro1994). Cheetahs are widely distributed across Botswana and it is likely that resident cheetahs were present at the majority of release sites (Klein, Reference Klein2007). Intraspecific competition is generally thought to be more detrimental to the translocated individual than to residents (Massei et al., Reference Massei, Quy, Gurney and Cowan2010). The introduction of translocated predators could potentially endanger resident predator populations through disease exposure, genetic outbreeding and infanticide (Wolf et al., Reference Wolf, Griffith, Reed and Temple1996); however, in this study the risks to resident cheetah populations were thought to be minimal because cheetahs are not thought to commit infanticide (Hunter & Skinner, Reference Hunter and Skinner2003), cheetah populations in Botswana are genetically similar (Dalton et al., Reference Dalton, Charruau, Boast and Kotze2013), and translocated cheetahs were screened for disease (Cheetah Conservation Botswana, unpubl. data). However, the translocation of species that commit infanticide, such as lions and leopards, which are reportedly the most commonly translocated species in Botswana, could result in territorial disputes, causing disruption to lion and leopard populations over a wide area (Treves & Karanth, Reference Treves and Karanth2003; Balme et al., Reference Balme, Slotow and Hunter2009; Kerth et al., Reference Kerth, Gusset, Garbely, König, Gabanapelo and Schiess-Meier2013). Further study is needed to investigate the impact of repeated translocation of these species into Botswana's protected areas.
Avoidance of human–predator conflict at release site
Follow-up data on conflict at the release sites were not collected systematically but we know at least one individual continued to prey on livestock. The introduction of cheetahs into Matusadona National Park did not result in increased conflict between people and cheetahs at the Park's borders (Purchase & Vhurumuku, Reference Purchase and Vhurumuku2005). However, other studies have shown that stock-raiding lions in sub-Saharan Africa and leopards in India continued killing livestock (and in the case of leopards, attacking people) after translocation (Funston, Reference Funston2001; Frank et al., Reference Frank, Hemson, Kushnir and Packer2006; Athreya et al., Reference Athreya, Odden, Linnell and Karanth2011), and 25% of translocated wolves and 40% of brown bears Ursus arctos continued to prey on livestock or were involved in a conflict event within 2 years of release (Blanchard & Knight, Reference Blanchard and Knight1995; Bradley et al., Reference Bradley, Pletscher, Bangs, Krunkel, Smith and Mack2005).
To reduce the potential for predators to continue to prey on livestock following translocation, the Department of Wildlife and National Parks releases them into protected areas (i.e. away from livestock). Protected areas in Botswana are unfenced, however, and as seen in this and other studies few translocated predators remain at their release site (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Aanes and Swenson1997; Weilenmann et al., Reference Weilenmann, Gusset, Mills, Gabanapelo and Schiess-Meier2010). The policy of translocating predators into protected areas could therefore be increasing human–predator conflict on farms bordering national parks and reserves.
Cost-effectiveness of cheetah translocations
The cost of capturing, translocating and monitoring a single cheetah in this study was estimated to be USD 7,110, an amount that could compensate for at least 12 head of livestock (Fontúrbel & Simonetti, Reference Fontúrbel and Simonetti2011). In addition to financial costs, translocation draws on the limited resources of conservation organizations and state wildlife departments, diverting personnel and equipment away from other conflict mitigation activities.
Conclusion
To justify the economic cost of translocating problem predators the method must be more successful than other mitigation techniques (Massei et al., Reference Massei, Quy, Gurney and Cowan2010). In this study, however, survival rates of translocated cheetahs were low, and stock losses continued at the capture site and potentially at the release site. Many farmers had a negative perception of translocation in terms of predator survival, the efficiency of the organizations involved or the efficacy of the method in reducing stock losses but they believed it gave the predator a chance of survival, compared to the alternative of lethal control, and 84.6% of farmers who had previously translocated a predator stated that they would probably do so again. The choice between lethal control and translocation is a dilemma for conservation organizations and potentially explains why many translocation programmes continue despite a low success rate (Athreya et al., Reference Athreya, Odden, Linnell and Karanth2011). Translocation programmes may provide farmers with an opportunity to obtain help if they can no longer tolerate a predator (Marnewick et al., Reference Marnewick, Hayward, Cilliers, Somers, Hayward and Somers2009), and the availability of a coping strategy and perceived control over a risk reduces the perception of the magnitude of the threat (Dickman, Reference Dickman2008), which could result in increased tolerance of predators. It is difficult to ascertain if this potential benefit justifies the costs.
Our results concur with the conclusion of Linnell et al. (Reference Linnell, Aanes and Swenson1997) that for carnivore species such as cheetahs in Botswana, where populations rather than individuals are the management units, translocation is unlikely to be justified and the money and time would be better spent on alternative mitigation methods such as compensation for loss of livestock, education programmes or improving farm management (Linnell et al., Reference Linnell, Aanes and Swenson1997; Massei et al., Reference Massei, Quy, Gurney and Cowan2010; Fontúrbel & Simonetti, Reference Fontúrbel and Simonetti2011). The proactive prevention of human–predator conflict is likely to be more effective than the reactive use of translocation as a temporary solution.
Acknowledgements
This study was conducted by Cheetah Conservation Botswana. The Ghanzi farming community and the Botswana Department of Wildlife and National Parks assisted with field work. The study was funded by the Howard Buffet Foundation, Wildlife Conservation Network and Stichting Spots, and the questionnaires were conducted in conjunction with research sponsored by National Geographic's Big Cats Initiative, Chester Zoo, the Comanis Foundation, the Prince Bernhard Fund for Nature, the Rufford Small Grants Foundation and Wilderness Wildlife Trust.
Biographical sketches
Lorraine Boast is interested in monitoring large carnivores. Kyle Good is interested in disease screening in carnivores. Rebecca Klein is interested in environmental education and community programmes for mitigating human–wildlife conflict.