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Asian badgers—the same, only different: how diversity among badger societies informs socio-ecological theory and challenges conservation

Authors :
David W. Macdonald
Zongqiang Xie
Chris Newman
Youbing Zhou
Christina D. Buesching
Yayoi Kaneko
Zhao-Min Zhou
Wenwen Chen
Macdonald, D
Newman, C
Harrington, L
Source :
Oxford Scholarship
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, 2019.

Abstract

Of thirteen extant species of true badger, eleven have a distribution in Asia, as do the more loosely affiliated stink- and honey-badgers. Even though these badgers show superficial similarities, they exhibit very different societies, even within same species under different circumstances, and provide an informative model to advance understanding of socio-ecology. They illustrate how group-living is promoted by natal philopatry, and food security; enabled by omnivory and hibernation in cold-winter regions. Conversely predatory, carnivorous species, and those competing for food security within a broader trophic guild, tend to be more solitary. This socio-ecological diversity poses conservation challenges, with Asian badgers vulnerable to habitat loss, urban and road development, direct conflict with people, culling to manage zoonotic disease transmission, and hunting pressure – often for traditional medicine. These threats are ever-more prevalent in expanding Asian economies, where cultural and attitudinal changes are urgently needed to safeguard biodiversity for the future.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Oxford Scholarship
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6fb2307025a71f69651e7d2418f649ab