Presence of Servals (Leptailurus serval) in a Mature, Closed‐Canopy Tropical Moist Montane (…)
ABSTRACT
Despite its widespread occurrence across Sub-Saharan Africa, the serval (Leptailurus serval) remains largely understudied, especially within Central and Western Africa. Historically regarded as a savanna specialist, servals are thought to be absent from dense, rainforest habitat (IUCN habitat class 1.9). Here, we present evidence of servals occupying tropical moist montane forest across several years, in Nyungwe National Park, Rwanda. We highlight the potential knowledge gap in the currently-accepted IUCN serval range map and the importance of increasing research efforts in understudied areas across Central and Western Africa to improve understanding of species' presence and ecology in these systems.
Site référencé:
African Journal of Ecology
African Journal of Ecology
Stakeholder Perspectives on the Current Decision‐Making Process of Invasive Alien Plant Management
3/07/2025
Behavioural Trade‐Offs in Impala : The Influence of Predators and Social Structure on Foraging and Vigilance
3/07/2025
Identifying the Substrate and Vegetation Characteristics Driving Population Densities in the Buckspoor Spider, Seothyra schreineri
3/07/2025
Elephant Fences Result in Limited Impacts on Movement of Non‐Target Species
2/07/2025
Issue Information
1er/07/2025