Matthew Linkie

The Tigers of Kerinci Seblat National Park

LocationCountryCategoriesDate
Kerinci Seblat National ParkIndonesiaAsia, Mammals19 Oct 2003

Kerinci Seblat National Park (KSNP), Sumatra, is a very high priority for wild tiger conservation because it still contains large blocks of forest and sufficient tiger prey. It is known that tigers in KSNP are threatened by habitat loss and poaching. However, the severity of, and interactions between these threats within the physical landscape are not known.

This research aims to investigate factors that might explain tiger and prey species abundances to better understand these processes. By implementing the first tiger and prey population monitoring programme for KSNP, this will promote sound conservation management in this key area for tigers.

Contact Matthew at: Ml33@kent.ac.uk

2nd RSG Grant Awarded

Male Sumatran tiger walking along a ridge in submontane habitat.

In May 2005, Matthew was awarded and second RSG towards this project. The second grant will allow Matthew to develop the first tiger and prey population monitoring programme for KSNP, set up using a Rufford Grant in 2003. Forest patrols and intelligence activities conducted by the KS-Tiger Protection and Conservation Units (TPCUs) have implemented and maintained law enforcement and anti-poaching efforts in and around KSNP.

This programme collaborates with all of the main governmental and non-governmental organizations working in and around KSNP. Within the monitoring program, tiger and prey relative and absolute abundance data have been collected for project Year 1 using camera traps and a newly developed detection/non-detection survey method. Data collection for Year 2 has now begun. This will enable short-term population trends to be determined, further Indonesian students to be trained and current Indonesian staff to be trained to more advanced levels.

This project aims to support KSNP management conserve tigers, their prey and the wider biodiversity by providing reliable information on the location and status of tigers, their prey and the different threat types. This will be most realistically achieved through four objectives:

•Objective 1: Continue monitoring tiger and principal tiger prey populations for KSNP. This will provide detailed information on whether the population trends of tigers and their prey are increasing, stable or decreasing across the whole of KSNP and within key focal areas of KSNP. This will then indicate critical areas that require protection and allow the effectiveness of conservation strategies to be assessed in the future.
•Objective 2: Develop the local capacity to query, analyse and spatially display field data
•Objective 3: Disseminate project information to project partners and policy makers. An important part of this project is to raise the profile of the Sumatran tiger and awareness about tiger conservation in KSNP. It is hoped that this can be achieved in part by presenting the major findings of this project to international and national NGOs and Government organizations through a series of workshops and the project website.
•Objective 4: Monitor and evaluate project results and effectiveness.

Project Update: May 2006

Below is Matthew's tiger paper published in the the Journal of Applied Ecology. In this paper they have developed a new tiger survey method, which is attracting a lot of attention due to its wide applicability.

File DownloadSize
Journal of Applied Ecology.pdf269.93 KB
Media Coverage

Just a brief update from the Kerinci project concerning the exciting discovery of the Sumatran ground cuckoo in our tiger camera traps. The story was covered by Channel 4 news, Sunday Times, Discovery Channel and others.

Article -
http://www.kent.ac.uk/news/stories/article2006.php?id=dicecuckoo.txt
Photo - http://www.kent.ac.uk/anthropology/dice/

Birdlife
http://www.birdlife.org/news/news/2006/07/cuckoo.html

Discover Channel
http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2006/07/11/cuckoo_ani.html?category=animal...

Fox News
http://origin.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,202879,00.html

The Times
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,25689-2261044,00.html

Jakarta Post - Indonesian main newspaper
http://www.tourismindonesia.com/index2.phpoption=com_content&do_pdf=1&id...

Antara - Indonesian main newspaper
http://www.antara.co.id/en/seenws/?id=16286

http://www.fauna-flora.org/docs/PR%20-%20Rare%20species%20caught%20on%20...

Final Report

Read about the activities undertaken and findings of this project in the final report below.

File DownloadSize
Detailed Final Report.doc662 KB
Booster Grant Awarded

Read about Matthew's latest project http://www.ruffordsmallgrants.org/rsg/projects/matthew_linkie


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