Control of a dominant predator influences the occurrence of a mesocarnivore of conservation concern

Wildlife Research
By: , and 

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Abstract

Context

Interspecific interactions shape ecological communities, influence community dynamics, and drive co-evolution. Despite their ecological significance, predation and competition remain understudied in plains spotted skunks (Spilogale interrupta), a species of conservation concern. Clarifying how predator management influences their occurrence is crucial for effective conservation.

Aims

We investigated how coyote (Canis latrans) management affects the occupancy of plains spotted skunks and whether interspecific interactions with domestic cats (Felis catus) and striped skunks (Mephitis mephitis) influence plains spotted skunk occurrence.

Methods

We analysed live-trap data from east-central South Dakota collected in spring of 2021 and 2022. The study area encompassed portions of counties that implemented disparate predator management regimes, including one with systematic annual coyote removal and another without. We used single-species occupancy models to estimate detection and occupancy probabilities for plains spotted skunks, domestic cats, and striped skunks, incorporating environmental factors, including the site-specific predator control regime. We then applied conditional two-species occupancy models to test whether cats and striped skunks influenced plains spotted skunk occurrence.

Key results

Plains spotted skunks had the lowest occupancy, followed by domestic cats, and striped skunks. Our findings showed significant associations between coyote removal and occupancy probabilities for each mesocarnivore species. Plains spotted skunks had higher occupancy in areas where coyotes were annually removed. Spotted skunk occurrence was not conditional on either domestic cat or striped skunk occurrence.

Conclusions

In our study system, cats appear to pose less predation risk to spotted skunks than do other predators, reducing the likelihood that cats significantly influence spotted skunk occupancy. Defensive behaviours and use of spatial refugia by plains spotted skunks may further mitigate predation risk. In addition, co-evolutionary pressures may have led to trait adaptations that facilitate the independent co-occurrence of plains spotted skunks and striped skunks.

Implications

Our findings highlighted the ecological consequences of predator management and the importance of considering predator–prey dynamics in conservation and management planning. Strategies aimed at conserving plains spotted skunks should integrate predator control measures while considering broader mesocarnivore community interactions.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Control of a dominant predator influences the occurrence of a mesocarnivore of conservation concern
Series title Wildlife Research
DOI 10.1071/wr25116
Volume 52
Issue 11
Publication Date October 24, 2025
Year Published 2025
Language English
Publisher CSIRO
Contributing office(s) Coop Res Unit Atlanta, Coop Res Unit Leetown
Description WR25116, 11 p.
Country United States
State South Dakota
County Faulk County, Hand County
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