Midiateca

Space Use and Movement of a Neotropical Top Predator: The Endangered Jaguar

Autores

Ronaldo G. Morato1,2,3*, Jared A. Stabach2, Chris H. Fleming2, Justin M. Calabrese2,

RogeÂrio C. De Paula1,3, KaÂtia M. P. M. Ferraz3,4, Daniel L. Z. Kantek5, Selma S. Miyazaki5,

Thadeu D. C. Pereira5, Gediendson R. Araujo6, Agustin Paviolo7, Carlos De Angelo7,

Mario S. Di Bitetti7, Paula Cruz7, Fernando Lima8,9, Laury Cullen8, Denis A. Sana3,10,

Emiliano E. Ramalho3,11, Marina M. Carvalho12, FaÂbio H. S. Soares12, Barbara Zimbres13,

Marina X. Silva14, Marcela D. F. Moraes14, Alexandre Vogliotti3,15, Joares A. May, Jr.16,

Mario Haberfeld16, Lilian Rampim16, Leonardo Sartorello16, Milton C. Ribeiro9,

Peter Leimgruber2

Ano de Publicação
2016
Categoria
PESQUISA AVALIAÇÃO E MONITORAMENTO DA BIODIVERSIDADE
Descrição

Abstract

Accurately estimating home range and understanding movement behavior can provide important information on ecological processes. Advances in data collection and analysis have improved our ability to estimate home range and movement parameters, both of which have the potential to impact species conservation. Fitting continuous-time movement model to data and incorporating the autocorrelated kernel density estimator (AKDE), we investigated range residency of forty-four jaguars fit with GPS collars across five biomes in Brazil and Argentina. We assessed home range and movement parameters of range resident animals and compared AKDE estimates with kernel density estimates (KDE). We accounted for differential space use and movement among individuals, sex, region, and habitat quality. Thirty-three (80%) of collared jaguars were range resident. Home range estimates using AKDE were 1.02 to 4.80 times larger than KDE estimates that did not consider autocorrelation. Males exhibited larger home ranges, more directional movement paths, and a trend towards larger distances traveled per day. Jaguars with the largest home ranges occupied the Atlantic Forest, a biome with high levels of deforestation and high human population density. Our results fill a gap in the knowledge of the species' ecology with an aim towards better conservation of this endangered/critically endangered carnivoreÐthe top predator in the Neotropics.


Tipo de publicação
Publicações periódicas (revistas, jornais, boletins)
Local da publicação
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0168176
Nº da edição ou volume
PLoS ONE 11(12): 2016 e0168176. doi:10.1371/journal. pone.0168176
Editora
PLOS ONE
Link