As economic expansion and development fragments the forest landscape of central India, the species that rely on that habitat--including endangered tigers and leopards--face dwindling populations and increased competition for food and resources, researchers said.
Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute (SCBI) scientists analysed the genes of these great cats in the Satpura-Maikal landscape--a 15,000-square-kilometer area composed of four interconnected reserves: Kanha, Satpura, Melghat and Pench.
This data, combined with India's forest ecology history, enabled scientists to construct a definitive picture of how habitat loss affects the genetic diversity and gene flow of cat populations.
Published in Evolutionary Applications and Proceedings of the Royal Society B, their research demonstrates that an intact forest corridor is vital for maintaining gene flow in these great cats.
Human activity in and around the Satpura-Maikal forest has dramatically changed the landscape over the course of 300 years, Smithsonian Institution said.
From 1700 to 2000, the habitat underwent a 25-fold increase in urbanisation.
The reduced and fragmented landscape makes it difficult for these solitary animals to safely move between protected reserves in search of mates and territory, the research paper said.
According to a media release, SCBI scientists collected 1,411 scat samples, 66 hair samples and four claw samples and identified 217 leopards and 273 tigers in the same region.
By extracting and analysing genetic material, scientists found that leopard gene flow between the four protected areas in central India is much lower today than it has been in the past.
Scientists found similar results for tigers.
Three of the reserve pairs with poor forest connectivity-- Kanha-Satpura, Pench-Melghat and Kanha-Melghat-- showed a 47 to 70 per cent reduction in gene flow when compared to historic levels.
The most dramatic decrease in gene flow occurred between Kanha and Satpura--the pair of reserves with the least functional forest corridors.
Scientists identified three points when tiger populations clearly diverged.
They found that tigers first entered India around 10,000 years ago.
Their habitat fragmented 700 years ago as agricultural expansion and other human activities took place.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, the third divergence event occurred as the British Empire expanded its territory and cleared the central Indian forests at an accelerated rate.
After this development, the tiger population was drastically reduced and was further isolated, the report said.
