Introduction
With the ongoing fragmentation of landscapes, wildlife populations are becoming increasingly isolated, making them vulnerable to inbreeding depression and loss of viability as a result of stochastic demographic events. This is particularly true for large carnivores and herbivores, which require a large area. The Endangered tiger Panthera tigris is such a species; numbers had declined to c. 3,200 adults by 2010 (GTRP, 2010) as a result of loss and fragmentation of habitat (Wikamanayake et al., Reference Wikramanayake, Dinerstein, Robinson, Karanth, Rabinowitz and Olson1998), reduction of prey base (Karanth & Stith, Reference Karanth, Stith, Seidensticker, Christie and Jackson1999), poaching (Nowell & Jackson, Reference Nowell and Jackson1996) and conflict with people (Gurung et al., Reference Gurung, Smith, McDougal, Karki and Barlow2008). It has been inferred that small tiger populations are vulnerable to extinction because of their highly structured genetic compositions (Kenney et al., Reference Kenney, Allendorf, McDougal and Smith2014).
Following the realization in the 1990s that tigers exist in more or less isolated subpopulations, the conservation strategy for tigers and other threatened large mammals has expanded from traditional protected area management to a metapopulation approach focused on providing connectivity between neighbouring populations (Wikramanayake et al., Reference Wikramanayake, Dinerstein, Robinson, Karanth, Rabinowitz and Olson1998). Although the scientific basis for this approach has been questioned (Simberloff et al., Reference Simberloff, Farr, Cox and Mehlman1992), landscape management has become a main focus of tiger conservation work. Several large-scale studies have been conducted in India (Harihar & Pandav, Reference Harihar and Pandav2012; Rathore et al., Reference Rathore, Dubey, Shrivastava, Pathak and Patil2012; Joshi et al., Reference Joshi, Vaidyanathan, Mondol, Edgaonkar and Ramakhrishnan2013; Sharma et al., Reference Sharma, Dutta, Maldonado, Wood, Panwar and Seidensticker2013a; Athreya et al., Reference Athreya, Navya, Punjabi, Linnell, Odden, Khetarpal and Karanth2014; Yumnam et al., Reference Yumnam, Jhala, Quereshi, Maldonado, Gopal and Saini2014), mostly examining the extent of movement and gene flow between isolated populations. The results disclosed higher genetic connectivity (thus more movement among fragments) than anticipated, and dispersal was found to occur across > 100 km of degraded habitat without resident tigers, connectivity presumably being facilitated by remnant strips of forest corridors within the human-dominated landscape (Sharma et al., Reference Sharma, Dutta, Maldonado, Wood, Panwar and Seidensticker2013b).
Nepal has initiated several conservation programmes to protect tigers, culminating in the creation of the Terai Arc Landscape Programme between India and Nepal (Chanchani et al., Reference Chanchani, Lamichhane, Malla, Maurya, Bista and Warrier2014), which aims to increase the land base for tigers (Smith et al., Reference Smith, Ahearn and McDougal1998) and to restore connectivity between protected areas (Wikramanayake et al., Reference Wikramanayake, McKnight, Dinerstein, Joshi, Gurung and Smith2004). In Nepal there is no legal provision for a wildlife corridor as a separate entity. Thus, using the existing provision of protected forest, in 2010 the government declared the identified potential tiger corridors as protection forests, thereby providing some legal provision for their protection. Based on an intensive survey in 2013 the total number of adult tigers in the country was estimated to be 163–235 (Dhakal et al., Reference Dhakal, Karki, Jnawali, Subedi, Pradhan and Malla2014).
Conserving large carnivores is problematic not only because of human-induced habitat fragmentation and potential loss of genetic viability; they pose a threat to people's safety and cause economic loss to farmers as a result of depredation of livestock, thus leading to conflicts with local communities (Saberwal et al., Reference Saberwal, Gibbs, Chellam and Johnsingh1994; Treves & Karanth, Reference Treves and Karanth2003; Woodroffe et al., Reference Woodroffe, Thirgood and Rabinowitz2005; Inskip & Zimmermann, Reference Inskip and Zimmermann2009; Goodrich, Reference Goodrich2010). Nepal has set aside tracts of fertile land as protected areas and has expanded these with buffer zones, thus restricting local people's access to natural resources. Creating corridors as an additional conservation measure has therefore been met with opposition, both locally and among some government officials: there is a saying that ‘establishing corridors may be good for tigers but bad for people’. When establishing wildlife corridors a main challenge is therefore to minimize conflict with local people (Dinerstein et al., Reference Dinerstein, Loucks, Heydlauff, Wikramanayake, Bryja and Forrest2006). To our knowledge no study had previously examined the functionality of corridors for tigers and simultaneously assessed the level of conflict that such a conservation measure creates for local people. We assessed the condition of the Khata corridor between Bardia National Park in Nepal and Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary in India by comparing tiger abundance, prey base and diets in the corridor and in the adjoining part of the park, and assessing the movement of tigers between the two protected areas via the corridor. We also examined tiger–human interactions by assessing the perceptions and attitudes of local people towards tigers and the conservation activities being implemented in the corridor.
Study area
The western part of Bardia National Park is known to support relatively dense populations of tigers and ungulate prey species (Wegge et al., Reference Wegge, Odden, Pokharel and Storaas2009; Dhakal et al., Reference Dhakal, Karki, Jnawali, Subedi, Pradhan and Malla2014). The southern end of this part of the park extends into Khata, an area consisting of degraded forest interspersed with agricultural settlements, between the border of the park and the Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary (Fig. 1). The study was carried out in the Khata corridor (c. 90 km2) and the adjoining south-west corner of the park (c. 60 km2). Until 6–7 decades ago the whole area consisted of contiguous pristine forests and grasslands along the Geruwa river, inhabited only by a small number of indigenous, malaria-resistant Tharu people. Especially rich in wildlife, the area now referred to as the south-west corner was then protected as a Royal Hunting Reserve. With the eradication of malaria in the 1950s and the subsequent government programme of resettling hill people to the lowlands, many people immigrated, settled and cleared land for cultivation. In what is now the Khata corridor the increasing pressure from hunting and snaring of wildlife, cutting of timber and fuelwood, and grazing of livestock reduced the populations of ungulates and large predators, thereby diminishing or cutting off the movement of tigers and other large mammals between the protected areas on each side of the national border (Bolton, Reference Bolton1976).
The corridor is more or less rectangular in shape, c. 11–12 km long and 8 km wide. It consists of degraded buffer zone and community forest (65 km2), some of it converted to open scrub forest as a result of excessive tree felling and livestock grazing. The remaining 25 km2 consists of four settlements with 170 households (c. 1,000 people), surrounded by cultivated land. The households within and along the border of the corridor kept c. 7,000 livestock (this study). Slightly more than one third of these were being grazed in the corridor, consisting of c. 1,000 large stock, mainly cattle, and c. 1,300 small stock. Nearly all cattle were accompanied by a watcher but some unproductive cows were left to graze unattended. Management and conservation activities are directed and implemented jointly by Bardia National Park/Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation, the District Forest Office/Department of Forest, and the National Trust for Nature Conservation (Nepal). A separate body, the Khata Corridor Coordination Committee, oversees human–wildlife conflict and compensation schemes.
The first step towards establishing a wildlife corridor between Bardia National Park and Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary was taken in 1996 when a 2–4 km wide buffer zone was established around the park. During the following years a series of local community development activities were initiated and regulations regarding human activities and extraction of natural resources were adopted and implemented. Lacking a legal classification for wildlife corridors, in 2010 the government designated the whole area between the south-western border of the park and the Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary at the Indian border as a protected forest. Since then, other regulations and management interventions have been added and successively implemented. The Nepalese government and national and international NGOs have promoted and funded these activities.
The south-west corner of Bardia National Park is bordered by agricultural settlements in the west and east and is contiguous with the National Park in the north and the Khata corridor in the south. Where the park connects with the corridor in the south it is only a few km wide; in the north, the south-west corner is wider as it merges with the larger National Park. The Geruwa river forms the western boundary of both study areas (Fig. 1). Biophysical, faunal and botanical descriptions of the south-west corner are provided in Dinerstein (Reference Dinerstein1979) and Wegge et al. (Reference Wegge, Odden, Pokharel and Storaas2009). In the park the floodplain along the Geruwa river consists of a mosaic of forest types and tall and short grasslands. Originally the corridor had similar vegetation and associated fauna; however, as a result of land clearing and human settlements since the 1950s most of the forests and scrubby grasslands have become degraded and the wildlife has been depleted (Jnawali, Reference Jnawali1995).
India's Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary, which is connected to the Khata corridor along a 5–6 km strip at its north-western corner, covers c. 400 km2 and sustains 17–24 tigers (Chanchani et al., Reference Chanchani, Lamichhane, Malla, Maurya, Bista and Warrier2014). Like the corridor, the sanctuary is surrounded by agricultural settlements on all sides except for the narrow strip that connects it to the corridor (Fig. 1).
Methods
The study included local capacity building in cooperation with local stakeholders and was carried out in compliance with the ethical code of conduct of the British Sociological Association.
Tiger abundance
During 2012 and 2013 we used camera trapping to estimate the numbers and densities of tigers in the corridor and in the south-west corner of Bardia National Park. We divided the areas into 2 × 2 km2 grid cells and within each we fixed one pair of digital cameras along a trail or road that was frequently used by tigers (Karanth, Reference Karanth1995). We deployed 30 pairs of cameras in total, 17 in Khata and 13 in the south-west corner of the park, and carried out the sampling concurrently in both areas, with 15 continuous trapping nights per station. Camera trapping has also been carried out in the Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary, by the Uttar Pradesh Forest Department and WWF-India. A report on tigers in the Transboundary Terai Arc Landscape (Chanchani et al., Reference Chanchani, Lamichhane, Malla, Maurya, Bista and Warrier2014) included photographs of tigers in the sanctuary, which facilitated identification of individuals that had also been trapped in the corridor.
We analysed the capture data by various methods. Firstly, we calculated indices of abundance from the number of captures per 100 camera trap nights (Carbone et al., Reference Carbone, Christie, Conforti, Coulson, Franklin and Ginsberg2001). The number of tigers in the two adjacent study sites at the time of sampling was estimated from capture–recapture analyses, using CAPTURE (White et al., Reference White, Burnham, Otis and Anderson1978). Earlier experimental camera trapping in the park had shown that a spacing of < 2 km between stations combined with a trapping duration of ≥ 10 days per station should capture all tigers present within the trapping grid (Wegge et al., Reference Wegge, Pokharel and Jnawali2004). We therefore assume that we captured all individuals that were present within the study areas at the time of sampling. Thus, the number of tigers photographed by camera traps should be similar to the results generated by the CAPTURE model. As sampling in each area was completed in one sweep within 15 days, the statistical requirement for spatial population closure was fulfilled (Otis et al., Reference Otis, Burnham, White and Anderson1978; Karanth & Nichols, Reference Karanth and Nichols1998).
As both study areas are small they are not suitable for estimating separate population densities reliably. Instead, we combined the capture data and estimated density for the combined area of c. 150 km2. For this we applied the Bayesian spatially explicit capture–recapture model in SPACECAP 1.1.0 (Gopalaswamy et al., Reference Gopalaswamy, Royle, Hines, Singh, Jathanna, Kumar and Karanth2012), implemented in R v. 3.0.1 (R Development Core Team, 2013). With a Bayesian framework SPACECAP combines the distribution of activity centres of sampled individuals and spatial detection functions to estimate density (Royle et al., Reference Royle, Nichols, Karanth and Gopalaswamy2009). We only used data from 2013 for the density estimation.
Prey abundance
To estimate prey densities we used Distance sampling along line transects (Buckland et al., Reference Buckland, Anderson, Burnham, Laake, Borchers and Thomas2001; Thomas et al., Reference Thomas, Buckland, Rexstad, Laake, Strindberg and Hedley2010), and recorded animal numbers from elephant back, as recommended for habitats in Bardia National Park (Wegge & Storaas, Reference Wegge and Storaas2009). From a random starting point we surveyed 55 transects in total (17 along 57 km in the south-west corner of Bardia National Park and 38 along 75 km in Khata), spaced 500 m apart, in February 2013. We analysed the data using DISTANCE 6.0 (Thomas et al., Reference Thomas, Laake, Rextad, Strindberg, Marques and Buckland2009). For several species the sample sizes were too small to generate meaningful density estimates for each area separately. We therefore also calculated abundance indices by enumerating the number of individuals of each species observed along 10 km transect segments in each of the two study areas.
Tiger diet
Tiger diets were estimated from micro-histological analysis of scats collected during the dry and wet seasons of 2013. Scats were collected opportunistically along forest roads and trails known to be used frequently by tigers. Tiger scats were distinguished from those of leopards Panthera pardus based on their appearance and associated pug-marks and scrapes; scats of tigers are larger, with a lower degree of coiling and relatively larger distance between two successive constrictions within a single piece of scat (Mukherjee et al., Reference Mukherjee, Goyal and Chellam1994; Biswas & Sankar, Reference Biswas and Sankar2002). Ideally the scats would have been verified to species through genetic analysis, as we may have inadvertently included scats from leopards (Farrell et al., Reference Farrell, Roman and Sunquist2000). However, as questionable scats were discarded and the density of leopards was 3–4 times lower than that of tigers, with extensive interspecific dietary overlap (Wegge et al., Reference Wegge, Odden, Pokharel and Storaas2009), we believe errors were minimal. For analysis we used the point-frame method (Ciucci et al., Reference Ciucci, Tosoni and Boitani2004), as it adjusts for rare prey items in the frequency calculations. Instead of using drop pins to select the prey items, we selected the prey items at each intersection (n = 50) in a gridded tray with a pair of tweezers and examined these under a dissecting microscope, or a high-power microscope if needed for reliable identification (Wegge et al., Reference Wegge, Shrestha and Flagstad2012). We prepared reference slides of potential prey species occurring in the area. We determined the diet by analysing the content of 127 tiger scats collected over a period of 16 months: 59 and 26 scats collected from the south-west corner of the park in winter and summer, respectively, and 34 and 8 scats collected from the Khata corridor in winter and summer, respectively.
We adjusted the relative proportions of prey species (numbers and biomass) in the diet according to prey size, using an equation derived from experimental work on the cougar Felis concolor (Ackerman et al., Reference Ackerman, Lindzey and Hemker1984):
where Y is the weight of prey consumed per scat and X is the prey body weight (kg).
The main purpose of the scat analysis was to compare the diet in the two study areas. As few scats were collected during the monsoon we restricted the comparison to the dry season. Hence, the frequency distributions of prey species in the scat samples collected during the monsoon were used mainly as crude, supplementary information.
We estimated selection of prey species by comparing the proportions of each prey type in the scats, after adjusting for prey size, with the expected proportions derived from the Distance sampling. For this, we used SCATMAN (Link & Karanth, Reference Link and Karanth1994). From the specified frequency observations of the various prey items in the scats and the means and standard deviations of the prey density estimates, this software estimates the relative number of scats produced per kill and compares observed and expected proportions of prey species by using likelihood ratio tests (G-tests; Zar, Reference Zar1984), based on a parametric bootstrapping procedure. Pooling samples from the two areas and seasons, we performed 1,000 bootstrap iterations; when two prey species were detected in a scat we counted each as 0.5 (Karanth & Sunquist, Reference Karanth and Sunquist1995).
Tiger–human conflict
Tiger–human conflict was previously investigated along the entire border of Bardia National Park (Bhattarai & Fischer, Reference Bhattarai and Fischer2014). To supplement that study with a focus on the conflict situation and people's perceptions along and within the Khata corridor, we collected information by means of a self-administered questionnaire survey distributed among 170 randomly selected households in the villages within and along the periphery of the corridor. The questionnaires followed the design of Gurung et al. (Reference Gurung, Smith, McDougal, Karki and Barlow2008) and consisted of closed-ended questions with multiple, optional answers (Supplementary Material S1). To gather more specific information about encounters of people and livestock with tigers we also carried out semi-structured interviews with 61 households that had experienced such encounters. In addition, we interviewed 20 chairpersons of Community Forest User Groups, 17 nature guides, five protected area managers and seven elephant caretakers, mainly enquiring about their general perceptions and attitudes. From the park headquarters and the field station of the National Trust for Nature Conservation we obtained information on the history and implementation of various community development programmes and conservation measures in the Khata corridor since 1996 (Supplementary Table S1).
Results
Abundance and density of tigers
The camera-trapped tigers were distributed across most of the two sampling areas (Fig. 1). In the south-west corner of Bardia National Park (60 km2) the mean number of individuals recorded in 2012 and 2013 was 9.5 (Table 1). The corresponding number for the Khata corridor (90 km2, with 65 km2 of tiger habitat) was 5.5. During the 2 years the mean frequency of tiger capture was 27.4 detections per 100 trap nights in the south-west corner of the park and 8.3 detections per 100 trap nights in the corridor. Most individuals were trapped three or more times, and some as many as 12 times. Using CAPTURE we estimated there were 15.0 ± SE 4.4 tigers in the south-west corner of the park and 4.0 ± SE 0.2 in the Khata corridor, which are comparable to the numbers recorded by camera traps (Table 1).
To estimate tiger density across both study areas combined, SPACECAP selected the half-normal detection function with a Bayesian P-value of individual encounters of 0.684. Density was estimated to be 7.0 ± SD 1.0 per 100 km2. The abundance estimate (N Super) of 22 ± SD 3.24 individuals was slightly higher than the sum of the separate estimates for the two study areas obtained using CAPTURE (19 ± SE 4.6; Table 1).
Distribution and movement of tigers
During 2012 and 2013, 13 individual tigers were recorded in the south-west corner of the park, and nine in the Khata corridor (Table 2). Nineteen of these tigers were different individuals, seven males and 12 females.
1 Data from Chanchani et al. (Reference Chanchani, Lamichhane, Malla, Maurya, Bista and Warrier2014)
2 Captured in both the south-west corner of Bardia National Park and the Khata corridor in the same year
3 Captured in both the Khata corridor and Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary in the same year
Of the nine tigers recorded in the corridor, three were also recorded in the south-west corner of the park and four were also recorded in Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary. Only two females (F2 and F3) were captured exclusively in the corridor. Among the four Khata tigers recorded in the wildlife sanctuary, one of the males (M2) was the offspring of tigress F2. Two months after being recorded together with his mother he was captured in the wildlife sanctuary. His sister (F3) dispersed a short distance and established a territory close to her mother within the corridor, near the border with the wildlife sanctuary.
Composition and breeding
Nine of the 13 tigers in the south-west corner of the park were female and four were male. In the Khata corridor there were four females and five males. During 2012–2013 the number of males increased slightly in both areas; meanwhile the number of females decreased in Khata but increased in the south-west corner of the park. However, changes between areas and years were not significant (Fisher's exact test, P > 0.29).
In 2012 successful breeding was recorded in the corridor. The male offspring (M2) dispersed to Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary and appeared to have established a territory, which included the southern part of the corridor. His sister (F3) dispersed a short distance towards the wildlife sanctuary, where she probably settled. Another Khata tigress (F1) bred in late 2013/early 2014, and an aborted foetus was subsequently found within her core area.
Prey abundance
In the south-west corner of the park 16.8 wild prey individuals were recorded per km of transect. In the Khata corridor the corresponding frequency was 2.6 km−1 (Fig. 2). Seven wild prey species were recorded in the south-west corner of the park, and five in the corridor. The chital Axis axis was the most abundant species in both areas, with significantly higher abundance in the park (Mann–Whitney, P < 0.02). Three other important prey species of the tiger, namely the hog deer Axis porcinus, sambar Rusa unicolor and swamp deer Rucervus duvaucelii, were not recorded in the corridor, only in the park. Primates were observed more frequently in the corridor but the difference was not significant (Mann–Whitney, P < 0.22). Even considering all species except the chital, more wild prey were recorded in the south-west corner of the park (t = 2.45, df = 8, P = 0.040). In the corridor, livestock were more abundant than wild prey; however, total prey abundance (livestock and wild prey combined) was similar in the two areas (Fig. 2).
In the south-west corner of the park the chital had the highest density (74.8 ± SE 14.8 km−2), followed by the hog deer (16.5 ± SE 6.4 km−2). In the corridor only the chital was recorded in sufficient numbers for density estimation (18.1 ± SE 11.5 km−2). Combining all species, the density of wild prey species was more than twice as high in the south-west corner of the park (98.7 ± SE 13.3 km−2) than in the corridor.
Tiger diet
Based on the frequency of occurrence in scats, the chital was the most important prey species in both areas, both in winter and summer (Table 3). Large wild ungulates were recorded only in the south-west corner of the park. During the dry season cattle were recorded more frequently in scats collected in the Khata corridor (Fisher's exact test, χ 2 = 0.008, P < 0.01) and all wild prey species combined were recorded more frequently in the south-west corner of the park (Fisher's exact test, χ 2 = 0.007, P < 0.01). There were no statistical differences (P > 0.16) between any of the other species or groups. The small samples from the monsoon season were similar to the winter composition, especially with respect to the main food species.
Estimated prey biomass yielded a better assessment of the contribution of the various prey species in the diet. The chital was the single most important species, contributing 57.3% of the total biomass in the two study areas combined (Table 4). The chital was followed by the hog deer and the swamp deer, with relative biomass of 9.3 and 8.7%, respectively. Nearly 8% of the biomass consisted of cattle. As cattle were depredated only in the corridor, large livestock probably comprised 12–15% of the diet there, considering their absence in the south-west corner of the park and fewer scat samples from the Khata corridor in the combined analysis. In the combined study area, sambar, swamp deer, wild boar Sus scrofa and barking deer Muntiacus muntjak were preyed upon significantly more often and chital significantly less than expected from their availabilities (Table 5).
1 D = (A × C)/Σ (A × C)
2 E = (D/B)/Σ(D/B)
*+ and − indicate preference and avoidance, respectively; bold font indicates statistical significance
Tiger–human conflict and local people's perceptions
During 1993–2013 three people were killed and four injured by tiger attacks in the corridor (i.e. a mean of 0.15 fatalities per year). Livestock losses have declined, particularly since 2007 (Fig. 3). During 2000–2007 the mean number of livestock killed annually was 19.1; in the following 6 years the mean annual loss was 6.3 animals (t = 4.103, df = 12, P < 0.001). Hence, annual losses of livestock as a result of predation by tigers declined from c. 1% to < 0.3% after 2007.
For various reasons 68% of the respondents had positive attitudes towards tigers and tiger conservation (Table 6). Loss of livestock and attacks on people were the main reasons for negative attitudes. However, 44% of the respondents supported tiger conservation even if a family member had been killed or injured in a tiger attack. Similarly, 67% were supportive even if their livestock had been killed by a tiger or leopard. Regarding the management of problem tigers, the majority wanted them to be captured and killed or put in zoos. Others called for conservation education, an improved compensation process and monitoring of problem tigers. Trade of body parts and retaliation for livestock losses were the main reasons for tigers being killed. The dearth of wild prey in the corridor was the main reason given for the killing of livestock by tigers.
Discussion
With both resident and transient tigers, the corridor was biologically functional. The overall positive attitude of local residents disproved allegations that corridors may be bad for people. Hence, the establishment of the Khata corridor has been a successful conservation initiative.
Tigers and prey
Although tigers were encountered in the corridor area occasionally before conservation measures were initiated (Bardia National Park staff, pers. comm.), their abundance has increased since then. Resident, breeding tigers were recorded there after the corridor was officially designated as a protected forest. Most of the nine individuals that were recorded in the corridor were also photographed in the south-west corner of Bardia National Park or in Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary, either in the same or the following year. Furthermore, the ranges of tigers that mainly occupied the protected areas extended into the corridor. There was evidence of young tigers dispersing from the Khata corridor to the wildlife sanctuary and from the south-west corner of the park to Khata. Although we found no evidence of tigers moving through the corridor from one protected area to the other, the sampling design and short time interval probably masked such movement; one young tigress that was photographed in the corridor was not recorded again. She could have moved to the wildlife sanctuary.
Twelve females and seven males were identified in total in the study areas, which is a normal sex ratio for this species (Sunquist, Reference Sunquist1981). The 2013 density estimate of seven tigers per 100 km2 for the combined area reflected a relatively dense total population (Jhala et al., Reference Jhala, Quereshi, Gopal and Sinha2011). Most recruitment to the corridor was from the south-west of the park, where a high density of tigers (> 15 per 100 km2) was recorded about a decade earlier (Wegge et al., Reference Wegge, Odden, Pokharel and Storaas2009). The increase in tiger numbers in the corridor is probably attributable to a slight increase in the natural prey base and reduced human disturbance as a result of the imposed management interventions.
Wild prey was more than twice as abundant in the south-west corner of the park than in the corridor, the difference being mainly attributable to the presence of c. four times more chital, which was not selectively depredated but was the most important food species. Among other important wild food species, only the wild boar was equally abundant in the two areas; sambar and swamp deer were recorded at relatively low frequencies and only in the south-west corner of the park. Large livestock were a supplementary food source in the corridor, accounting for > 10% of the biomass in the diet of tigers there. Since 2014 grazing in the corridor has been prohibited, except for shorter periods in a few designated patches. Tigers in the corridor are expected to prey more on wild ungulates, thus controlling their population growth, which is an important objective of the habitat improvement activities.
Tiger–human conflict
In spite of increasing numbers of tigers there was no escalation in conflict with local people. On the contrary, predation of livestock as well as the frequency of attacks on people decreased. A previous study in Bardia National Park and its buffer zone (Bhattarai & Fischer, Reference Bhattarai and Fischer2014) reported a six times higher frequency of fatal encounters and nearly seven times more losses of livestock than were recorded within and along the Khata corridor (0.93 and 0.15 people per year, and 2 and < 0.3% annual loss, respectively). Although the two areas cannot be compared directly, the reason for the relatively low frequencies of human and livestock fatalities as a result of encounters with tigers in the corridor is difficult to explain. In their study Bhattarai & Fischer (Reference Bhattarai and Fischer2014) found that livestock losses were higher in areas with low abundance of wild prey, a general conclusion reported from studies elsewhere (Ramakrishnan et al., Reference Ramakrishnan, Coss and Pelkey1999, Inskip & Zimmermann, Reference Inskip and Zimmermann2009; Goodrich, Reference Goodrich2010, but see Suryawanshi et al., Reference Suryawanshi, Bhatnagar, Redpath and Mishra2013). Although data were not available to compare the abundance of wild prey in the corridor and in the park buffer zones, it is unlikely that the natural prey base was higher in Khata. Nor is it likely that there were more tigers in the buffer zone of the park. The lower and declining rate of attacks on people and livestock in the corridor is probably attributable to less human activity and more efficient herding practices there than along the park boundary.
As reported in interviews with residents in the vicinity of the park (Bhattarai & Fischer, Reference Bhattarai and Fischer2014), and in other tiger–human conflict studies (Gurung et al., Reference Gurung, Smith, McDougal, Karki and Barlow2008; Karanth & Nepal, Reference Karanth and Nepal2012), most people in and along the corridor had a positive attitude towards tigers and tiger conservation. Means to reduce livestock loss, and a speedier and better compensation scheme were their highest priorities for reducing local conflicts. These concerns have been addressed by stall feeding and altered grazing regulations and by modifying the process of compensating for loss of livestock and injuries or death inflicted on humans.
The overall positive perception was surprising considering the strict regulations imposed on resource extraction and livestock grazing. The responses to the questionnaires and interviews might have been biased to some extent, as they were carried out by people associated with local conservation institutions. Nevertheless, the positive attitudes were a result of the community development activities being conducted in the corridor, as verified by informal conversations. Securing funding for such activities is facilitated by the concern for tiger conservation within the international community, and it is unlikely that a similar range of activities could have been initiated with the same level of funding if the area had not been identified and designated as a tiger corridor. As such, the Khata corridor exemplifies the system of payment for ecosystem services (Jack et al., Reference Jack, Kousky and Sims2008) and the wildlife premium mechanism (Dinerstein et al., Reference Dinerstein, Varma, Wikramanayake, Powell, Lumpkin and Naidoo2013).
Future of the Khata corridor
Although the establishment of the corridor has been a success for tiger conservation and has been accepted by local residents, it faces threats from development and from two large-scale irrigation projects that are expected to reduce water flow in the floodplain, which would affect the ecosystem along the western part of the park and the corridor. Attempts are being made to minimize negative effects on tigers and other biodiversity.
Management of the corridor is being modified continually to ease the conflict with local residents while simultaneously improving the quality of tiger habitat. Both resident and transient tigers are likely to increase in number with the availability of more natural prey and less human disturbance. During a transition period, while the wild prey is increasing and more dispersing tigers immigrate from the park, conflicts may escalate rather than diminish. Only when, and if, the natural prey base becomes sufficiently abundant to sustain the number of tigers occupying and frequenting the corridor is the level of conflict likely to diminish. Tiger–human conflict is likely to persist at the current, low level. Hence, the conservation effort has been a success; connectivity between Bardia National Park and Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary supports the maintenance of genetic viability in the tiger populations, and the critical concern that corridors may be bad for people has been refuted. Furthermore, by linking the two protected areas via the Khata corridor, a large, functional tiger landscape, consisting of a c. 200-km-long arc of contiguous protected areas (Katarniaghat Wildlife Sanctuary, Khata corridor, Bardia and Banke National Parks and their buffer zones, Kamdi corridor and Suhelwa Wildlife Sanctuary) covering an area of c. 3,000 km2, with > 80 adult tigers, has been securely established in the transboundary Terai Arc Landscape in west-central Nepal.
Acknowledgements
We thank the Department of National Parks and Wildlife Conservation, Nepal for permission and support for carrying out this study. Funding was provided by the USAID Hariyo Ban Program, managed by WWF Nepal, and by the National Trust for Nature Conservation (NTNC). NTNC and Bardia National Park provided logistical and technical assistance. We are grateful to Hemanta K. Yadav for assistance with analysing the prey data, and to Shant R. Jnawali, Khadga B. Basnet and Naresh Subedi for encouragement and general research support.
Author contributions
PW designed the study, assisted in the statistical analyses and wrote the article. SKY implemented the study in the field, analysed the photographs and scats, and did the preliminary statistical analyses. BRL carried out the statistical modelling of the tiger data and assisted in writing the manuscript.
Biographical sketches
Per Wegge has studied the habitat, food ecology and predator–prey relationships of large mammals in Nepal for more than 20 years. Shailendra Kumar Yadav monitors the abundance of large mammals within and outside protected areas in the lowland Terai region. Babu Ram Lamichhane models the structure and density of tiger and leopard populations, with a recent focus on human–wildlife interactions.