Searching for manatees in the dark waters of a transboundary river between Mexico and Belize: a predictive distribution model

Antillean manatees in the Hondo River have been recorded from aerial and aquatic surveys, and interviews. However, these studies have been conducted only in the lower riverbed, leaving a gap of information about their presence and habitat characteristics in the rest of the river. We characterize and determine the ecohydrological variables influencing the presence and habitat use of manatees in the Hondo River. During 2017 and 2018, 30 based-boat field trips were conducted in five consecutive transects of 15 km each. A mixed methodology was used for manatee detection: side-scan sonar, direct sightings, and feces collection. Ecohydrological variables were measured in all transects and fixed points. The survey effort was 136.5 h. We recorded 123 manatees: 47% were observations during the boat-based surveys, 29% were at fixed points, and 24% were opportunistic. Additionally, 10 manatee feces were found. The first transect of the river showed the highest relative abundance for the two sampled seasons (windy = 0.27 manatees/km, dry = 0.55 manatees/km). According to the Poisson model, the estimated population was equal to 51 manatees. A random forest model suggested high probability of observing manatees in the first transects and decreasing at the upstream. The ecohydrological variables influencing the detection of manatees were conductivity, transparency, depth, and proximity to the Four Mile lagoon. The first two transects have ecohydrological characteristics that makes a benign environment for refuge, rest and feeding of manatees. We recommend carrying out conservation efforts in the first transects, such as protection and the regulation of boat transit.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Corona-Figueroa, M. Fabiola, Ríos, Ney, Castelblanco-Martínez, Delma N, Vilchez-Mendoza, Sergio J, Delgado-Rodríguez, Diego, Niño-Torres, Carlos A
Format: Artículo biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Springer, Nueva York (Estados Unidos) 2020-11-05
Subjects:MODELOS DE PREDICCION, ANALISIS DEL HABITAT, CONSERVACION, PROTECCION, PREDICCION, ECOSISTEMA, RIO HONDO, MANATÍ ANTILLANO (Trichechus Manatus Manatus), MÉXICO, BELICE,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s10452-020-09810-9
https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/10267
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-catie-11554-10267
record_format koha
spelling dig-catie-11554-102672022-08-05T18:53:38Z Searching for manatees in the dark waters of a transboundary river between Mexico and Belize: a predictive distribution model Corona-Figueroa, M. Fabiola Ríos, Ney Castelblanco-Martínez, Delma N Vilchez-Mendoza, Sergio J Delgado-Rodríguez, Diego Niño-Torres, Carlos A MODELOS DE PREDICCION ANALISIS DEL HABITAT CONSERVACION PROTECCION PREDICCION ECOSISTEMA RIO HONDO MANATÍ ANTILLANO (Trichechus Manatus Manatus) MÉXICO BELICE Antillean manatees in the Hondo River have been recorded from aerial and aquatic surveys, and interviews. However, these studies have been conducted only in the lower riverbed, leaving a gap of information about their presence and habitat characteristics in the rest of the river. We characterize and determine the ecohydrological variables influencing the presence and habitat use of manatees in the Hondo River. During 2017 and 2018, 30 based-boat field trips were conducted in five consecutive transects of 15 km each. A mixed methodology was used for manatee detection: side-scan sonar, direct sightings, and feces collection. Ecohydrological variables were measured in all transects and fixed points. The survey effort was 136.5 h. We recorded 123 manatees: 47% were observations during the boat-based surveys, 29% were at fixed points, and 24% were opportunistic. Additionally, 10 manatee feces were found. The first transect of the river showed the highest relative abundance for the two sampled seasons (windy = 0.27 manatees/km, dry = 0.55 manatees/km). According to the Poisson model, the estimated population was equal to 51 manatees. A random forest model suggested high probability of observing manatees in the first transects and decreasing at the upstream. The ecohydrological variables influencing the detection of manatees were conductivity, transparency, depth, and proximity to the Four Mile lagoon. The first two transects have ecohydrological characteristics that makes a benign environment for refuge, rest and feeding of manatees. We recommend carrying out conservation efforts in the first transects, such as protection and the regulation of boat transit. 2021-02-04T19:34:26Z 2021-02-04T19:34:26Z 2020-11-05 Artículo https://doi.org/10.1007/s10452-020-09810-9 https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/10267 en Aquat Ecol info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess application/pdf Springer, Nueva York (Estados Unidos)
institution CATIE
collection DSpace
country Costa Rica
countrycode CR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-catie
tag biblioteca
region America Central
libraryname Biblioteca Conmemorativa Orton
language English
topic MODELOS DE PREDICCION
ANALISIS DEL HABITAT
CONSERVACION
PROTECCION
PREDICCION
ECOSISTEMA
RIO HONDO
MANATÍ ANTILLANO (Trichechus Manatus Manatus)
MÉXICO
BELICE
MODELOS DE PREDICCION
ANALISIS DEL HABITAT
CONSERVACION
PROTECCION
PREDICCION
ECOSISTEMA
RIO HONDO
MANATÍ ANTILLANO (Trichechus Manatus Manatus)
MÉXICO
BELICE
spellingShingle MODELOS DE PREDICCION
ANALISIS DEL HABITAT
CONSERVACION
PROTECCION
PREDICCION
ECOSISTEMA
RIO HONDO
MANATÍ ANTILLANO (Trichechus Manatus Manatus)
MÉXICO
BELICE
MODELOS DE PREDICCION
ANALISIS DEL HABITAT
CONSERVACION
PROTECCION
PREDICCION
ECOSISTEMA
RIO HONDO
MANATÍ ANTILLANO (Trichechus Manatus Manatus)
MÉXICO
BELICE
Corona-Figueroa, M. Fabiola
Ríos, Ney
Castelblanco-Martínez, Delma N
Vilchez-Mendoza, Sergio J
Delgado-Rodríguez, Diego
Niño-Torres, Carlos A
Searching for manatees in the dark waters of a transboundary river between Mexico and Belize: a predictive distribution model
description Antillean manatees in the Hondo River have been recorded from aerial and aquatic surveys, and interviews. However, these studies have been conducted only in the lower riverbed, leaving a gap of information about their presence and habitat characteristics in the rest of the river. We characterize and determine the ecohydrological variables influencing the presence and habitat use of manatees in the Hondo River. During 2017 and 2018, 30 based-boat field trips were conducted in five consecutive transects of 15 km each. A mixed methodology was used for manatee detection: side-scan sonar, direct sightings, and feces collection. Ecohydrological variables were measured in all transects and fixed points. The survey effort was 136.5 h. We recorded 123 manatees: 47% were observations during the boat-based surveys, 29% were at fixed points, and 24% were opportunistic. Additionally, 10 manatee feces were found. The first transect of the river showed the highest relative abundance for the two sampled seasons (windy = 0.27 manatees/km, dry = 0.55 manatees/km). According to the Poisson model, the estimated population was equal to 51 manatees. A random forest model suggested high probability of observing manatees in the first transects and decreasing at the upstream. The ecohydrological variables influencing the detection of manatees were conductivity, transparency, depth, and proximity to the Four Mile lagoon. The first two transects have ecohydrological characteristics that makes a benign environment for refuge, rest and feeding of manatees. We recommend carrying out conservation efforts in the first transects, such as protection and the regulation of boat transit.
format Artículo
topic_facet MODELOS DE PREDICCION
ANALISIS DEL HABITAT
CONSERVACION
PROTECCION
PREDICCION
ECOSISTEMA
RIO HONDO
MANATÍ ANTILLANO (Trichechus Manatus Manatus)
MÉXICO
BELICE
author Corona-Figueroa, M. Fabiola
Ríos, Ney
Castelblanco-Martínez, Delma N
Vilchez-Mendoza, Sergio J
Delgado-Rodríguez, Diego
Niño-Torres, Carlos A
author_facet Corona-Figueroa, M. Fabiola
Ríos, Ney
Castelblanco-Martínez, Delma N
Vilchez-Mendoza, Sergio J
Delgado-Rodríguez, Diego
Niño-Torres, Carlos A
author_sort Corona-Figueroa, M. Fabiola
title Searching for manatees in the dark waters of a transboundary river between Mexico and Belize: a predictive distribution model
title_short Searching for manatees in the dark waters of a transboundary river between Mexico and Belize: a predictive distribution model
title_full Searching for manatees in the dark waters of a transboundary river between Mexico and Belize: a predictive distribution model
title_fullStr Searching for manatees in the dark waters of a transboundary river between Mexico and Belize: a predictive distribution model
title_full_unstemmed Searching for manatees in the dark waters of a transboundary river between Mexico and Belize: a predictive distribution model
title_sort searching for manatees in the dark waters of a transboundary river between mexico and belize: a predictive distribution model
publisher Springer, Nueva York (Estados Unidos)
publishDate 2020-11-05
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s10452-020-09810-9
https://repositorio.catie.ac.cr/handle/11554/10267
work_keys_str_mv AT coronafigueroamfabiola searchingformanateesinthedarkwatersofatransboundaryriverbetweenmexicoandbelizeapredictivedistributionmodel
AT riosney searchingformanateesinthedarkwatersofatransboundaryriverbetweenmexicoandbelizeapredictivedistributionmodel
AT castelblancomartinezdelman searchingformanateesinthedarkwatersofatransboundaryriverbetweenmexicoandbelizeapredictivedistributionmodel
AT vilchezmendozasergioj searchingformanateesinthedarkwatersofatransboundaryriverbetweenmexicoandbelizeapredictivedistributionmodel
AT delgadorodriguezdiego searchingformanateesinthedarkwatersofatransboundaryriverbetweenmexicoandbelizeapredictivedistributionmodel
AT ninotorrescarlosa searchingformanateesinthedarkwatersofatransboundaryriverbetweenmexicoandbelizeapredictivedistributionmodel
_version_ 1756058533879611392