Baseline for monitoring and habitat use of medium to large non-volant mammals in Gran Sabana, Venezuela

Abstract: The Gran Sabana is a region of great biogeographical and conservation value that has been recently threatened due to increasing overexploitation of natural resources and illegal mining. Systematic survey methods are required in order to study species responses to landscape transformation. The main objectives of this study were: 1) to test the relationship between habitat types and mammal species presence in the Gran Sabana and Canaima National Park (NP), and 2) establish baseline methodology that can set guidelines for future, considering sampling limitations, conservation opportunities and increasing threats to biodiversity in this region. We implemented a stratified sampling design using camera traps for monitoring medium and large mammals in two previously under-sampled regions in the Gran Sabana, south-east Venezuela. We analysed time-series of remotely sensed vegetation indices to classify habitat types and summarized relative abundance of mammals, naïve occupancy, and habitat fidelity for each type. With a sampling effort of 5,523 camera*days, 29 species of mammals were recorded, including endangered Priodontes maximus, and vulnerable: Speothos venaticus, Tapirus terrestris, and Panthera onca. Cuniculus paca and Dasyprocta leporina were the most frequently registered, while Hydrochoeris hydrochaeris, Leopardus wiedii, and Leopardus tigrinus had few records. Most of the species were associated with forest (13), fewer with transitional shrub (7) and savanna (5) habitats, but only some of these were statistically significant. Cerdocyon thous show significant association with savanna (P < 0.01), whereas Leopardus pardalis (P < 0.05) and Cuniculus paca (P < 0.05) with shrub-intermediate habitat. As many as seven species: Dasypus kappleri, Dasyprocta leporine, Mazama americana, M. gouazoubira, Nasua nasua, Priodontes maximus, and Tapirus terrestris have statistically significant association to forest habitat (P < 0.05). We present the first record Myoprocta pratti for Canaima NP. We found higher species richness of large- and medium-sized mammals comparable to lowland Guianas and Amazon sites. Four species remained undetected, probably due to low abundance or detectability, but Sylvilagus brasiliensis seems to be truly absent from the Gran Sabana. Uncontrolled development of Orinoco Mining Arc on the border of Canaima NP and the Gran Sabana raised new ecological and social concerns.

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Main Authors: Stachowicz,Izabela, Ferrer Paris,José Rafael, Quiroga-Carmona,Marcial, Moran,Lisandro, Lozano,Cecilia
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Asociación Mexicana de Mastozoología A.C. 2020
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2007-33642020000200169
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spelling oai:scielo:S2007-336420200002001692021-02-18Baseline for monitoring and habitat use of medium to large non-volant mammals in Gran Sabana, VenezuelaStachowicz,IzabelaFerrer Paris,José RafaelQuiroga-Carmona,MarcialMoran,LisandroLozano,Cecilia camera trap Canaima National Park Guiana Shield Orinoco Mining Arc Priodontes maximus Speothos venaticus: Venezuelan Guayana Abstract: The Gran Sabana is a region of great biogeographical and conservation value that has been recently threatened due to increasing overexploitation of natural resources and illegal mining. Systematic survey methods are required in order to study species responses to landscape transformation. The main objectives of this study were: 1) to test the relationship between habitat types and mammal species presence in the Gran Sabana and Canaima National Park (NP), and 2) establish baseline methodology that can set guidelines for future, considering sampling limitations, conservation opportunities and increasing threats to biodiversity in this region. We implemented a stratified sampling design using camera traps for monitoring medium and large mammals in two previously under-sampled regions in the Gran Sabana, south-east Venezuela. We analysed time-series of remotely sensed vegetation indices to classify habitat types and summarized relative abundance of mammals, naïve occupancy, and habitat fidelity for each type. With a sampling effort of 5,523 camera*days, 29 species of mammals were recorded, including endangered Priodontes maximus, and vulnerable: Speothos venaticus, Tapirus terrestris, and Panthera onca. Cuniculus paca and Dasyprocta leporina were the most frequently registered, while Hydrochoeris hydrochaeris, Leopardus wiedii, and Leopardus tigrinus had few records. Most of the species were associated with forest (13), fewer with transitional shrub (7) and savanna (5) habitats, but only some of these were statistically significant. Cerdocyon thous show significant association with savanna (P < 0.01), whereas Leopardus pardalis (P < 0.05) and Cuniculus paca (P < 0.05) with shrub-intermediate habitat. As many as seven species: Dasypus kappleri, Dasyprocta leporine, Mazama americana, M. gouazoubira, Nasua nasua, Priodontes maximus, and Tapirus terrestris have statistically significant association to forest habitat (P < 0.05). We present the first record Myoprocta pratti for Canaima NP. We found higher species richness of large- and medium-sized mammals comparable to lowland Guianas and Amazon sites. Four species remained undetected, probably due to low abundance or detectability, but Sylvilagus brasiliensis seems to be truly absent from the Gran Sabana. Uncontrolled development of Orinoco Mining Arc on the border of Canaima NP and the Gran Sabana raised new ecological and social concerns.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAsociación Mexicana de Mastozoología A.C.Therya v.11 n.2 20202020-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2007-33642020000200169en10.12933/therya-20-891
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country México
countrycode MX
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-mx
tag revista
region America del Norte
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Stachowicz,Izabela
Ferrer Paris,José Rafael
Quiroga-Carmona,Marcial
Moran,Lisandro
Lozano,Cecilia
spellingShingle Stachowicz,Izabela
Ferrer Paris,José Rafael
Quiroga-Carmona,Marcial
Moran,Lisandro
Lozano,Cecilia
Baseline for monitoring and habitat use of medium to large non-volant mammals in Gran Sabana, Venezuela
author_facet Stachowicz,Izabela
Ferrer Paris,José Rafael
Quiroga-Carmona,Marcial
Moran,Lisandro
Lozano,Cecilia
author_sort Stachowicz,Izabela
title Baseline for monitoring and habitat use of medium to large non-volant mammals in Gran Sabana, Venezuela
title_short Baseline for monitoring and habitat use of medium to large non-volant mammals in Gran Sabana, Venezuela
title_full Baseline for monitoring and habitat use of medium to large non-volant mammals in Gran Sabana, Venezuela
title_fullStr Baseline for monitoring and habitat use of medium to large non-volant mammals in Gran Sabana, Venezuela
title_full_unstemmed Baseline for monitoring and habitat use of medium to large non-volant mammals in Gran Sabana, Venezuela
title_sort baseline for monitoring and habitat use of medium to large non-volant mammals in gran sabana, venezuela
description Abstract: The Gran Sabana is a region of great biogeographical and conservation value that has been recently threatened due to increasing overexploitation of natural resources and illegal mining. Systematic survey methods are required in order to study species responses to landscape transformation. The main objectives of this study were: 1) to test the relationship between habitat types and mammal species presence in the Gran Sabana and Canaima National Park (NP), and 2) establish baseline methodology that can set guidelines for future, considering sampling limitations, conservation opportunities and increasing threats to biodiversity in this region. We implemented a stratified sampling design using camera traps for monitoring medium and large mammals in two previously under-sampled regions in the Gran Sabana, south-east Venezuela. We analysed time-series of remotely sensed vegetation indices to classify habitat types and summarized relative abundance of mammals, naïve occupancy, and habitat fidelity for each type. With a sampling effort of 5,523 camera*days, 29 species of mammals were recorded, including endangered Priodontes maximus, and vulnerable: Speothos venaticus, Tapirus terrestris, and Panthera onca. Cuniculus paca and Dasyprocta leporina were the most frequently registered, while Hydrochoeris hydrochaeris, Leopardus wiedii, and Leopardus tigrinus had few records. Most of the species were associated with forest (13), fewer with transitional shrub (7) and savanna (5) habitats, but only some of these were statistically significant. Cerdocyon thous show significant association with savanna (P < 0.01), whereas Leopardus pardalis (P < 0.05) and Cuniculus paca (P < 0.05) with shrub-intermediate habitat. As many as seven species: Dasypus kappleri, Dasyprocta leporine, Mazama americana, M. gouazoubira, Nasua nasua, Priodontes maximus, and Tapirus terrestris have statistically significant association to forest habitat (P < 0.05). We present the first record Myoprocta pratti for Canaima NP. We found higher species richness of large- and medium-sized mammals comparable to lowland Guianas and Amazon sites. Four species remained undetected, probably due to low abundance or detectability, but Sylvilagus brasiliensis seems to be truly absent from the Gran Sabana. Uncontrolled development of Orinoco Mining Arc on the border of Canaima NP and the Gran Sabana raised new ecological and social concerns.
publisher Asociación Mexicana de Mastozoología A.C.
publishDate 2020
url http://www.scielo.org.mx/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2007-33642020000200169
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