Safeguarding Asian tapir habitat in Sumatra, Indonesia

Open Access
Authors
  • I.M.R. Pinondang
  • N.J. Deere
  • M. Voigt
  • Ardiantiono
  • A. Subagyo
  • A. Moßbrucker
  • A. Fardilla
  • D.S. Chandradewi
  • F. Surahmat
  • F.A. Widodo
  • G. Fredriksson
  • H.T. Wibisono
  • J. Supriatna
  • M.I. Lubis
  • N. Asmita
  • Sunarto
  • T. Lidra
  • T. Ariyanto
  • W.R. Albert
  • W. Novarino
  • W. Pusparini
  • Y. Dinata
  • M.J. Struebig
Publication date 01-07-2024
Journal Oryx
Volume | Issue number 58 | 4
Pages (from-to) 451-461
Number of pages 11
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract
The Asian tapir Tapirus indicus is the only tapir species in Southeast Asia. It is declining across its range and is categorized as Endangered on the IUCN Red List. The forests of Sumatra are critical to Asian tapir conservation as they contain some of the last remaining populations of the species, yet conservation efforts are hindered by a lack of information on habitat suitability. We collated camera-trap data from nine landscapes across 69,500 km2 of Sumatran rainforest to help predict suitable habitat for Asian tapirs on the island. Predictions from Bayesian occupancy models demonstrated that tapir occupancy was greatest in forests below 600 m elevation and exclusively in forests with high aboveground biomass. Forests around the Barisan Mountains on the west of Sumatra provide the most suitable habitat for the species. Only 36% of the most critical habitat (i.e. 80th percentile of predicted occupancy values, or above) for tapirs is formally protected for conservation, with much of the remainder found in forests allocated to watershed protection (35%) or logging (23%). We highlight several key areas in Sumatra where tapir conservation could be bolstered, such as by leveraging existing conservation efforts for other charismatic flagships species on the island.
Document type Article
Note With supplementary file.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0030605323001576
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85198058615
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