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Human density impacts Nubian Flapshell turtle survival in Sub-Saharan Africa: Future conservation strategies.

Authors :
Demaya, Gift Simon
Behangana, Mathias
Petrozzi, Fabio
Fa, Julia E.
Luiselli, Luca
Source :
Journal of Arid Environments. Oct2023, Vol. 217, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Nubian Flapshell Turtle, Cyclanorbis elegans , is classified as one of the most threatened chelonian species globally (Critically Endangered according to the IUCN Red List). The species is presumed extinct in most of its historical distribution range, but still survives along the White Nile between South Sudan and northern Uganda. In this paper, we utilised the maximum entropy model (MaxEnt) to evaluate the habitat suitability of the species to explore its distribution decline by comparing historical and current presence data, as well as correlate the predicted past and present distribution with human population density. Our assumption is that overexploitation of the turtle occurs (and has occurred in the past) in sites with high human density. We show that: (1) a large number of historical sites where the turtle was present had high human population densities, whereas (2) the current distribution model showed low overlap between areas with high probability of turtle presence and high human population density. We suggest that Nubian flapshells are likely to have become extinct because of high human density (and therefore high overexploitation) and remnant populations have only survived along waterbodies with low numbers of people. However, the presence sites of this species in northern Uganda are under pressure by rapidly growing refugees'settlements. We also hypothesize that the range of the Nubian Flapshell may be shifting to the south (where the general environment is wetter and cooler) due to climate change affecting the distribution of this freshwater species. The conservation implications of these evidence are also presented. • The Nubian flapshell turtle is one of the most threatened reptile species in the world. • A spatial modelling approach revealed intriguing extinction patterns across Africa. • There was an association between historical sites of presence and high density of humans (hence fishers). • There i san association between current remnant presence sites and low human density. • Refugees' settlements represent a serious torea for turtles in northern Uganda. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01401963
Volume :
217
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Arid Environments
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169789443
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaridenv.2023.105027