The role of fragmentation and landscape changes in the ecological release of common nest predators in the neotropics

 

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores: Spínola, Romeo, Cove, Michael, Jackson Victoria, Saénz, Joel C.
Formato: artículo
Fecha de Publicación:2014
Descripción:Loss of large mammalian carnivores may allow smaller mesopredators to become abundant and threaten other community members. There is considerable debate about mesopredator release and the role that other potential factors such as landscape variables and human alterations to land cover lead to increased mesopredator abundance. We used camera traps to detect four mesopredators (tayra, Eira barbara; white-nosed coati, Nasua narica; northern raccoon, Procyon lotor and common opossum, Didelphis opossum) in a biological corridor in Costa Rica to estimate habitat covariates that influenced the species' detection and occurrence. We selected these mesopredators because as semi-arboreal species they might be common nest predators, posing a serious threat to resident and migratory songbirds. Pineapple production had a pronounced positive effect on the detectability of tayras, while forest cover had a negative effect on the detection of coatis. This suggests that abundance might be elevated due to the availability of agricultural food resources and foraging activities are concentrated in forest fragments and pineapple edge habitats. Raccoon and opossum models exhibited little influence on detection from habitat covariates. Occurrence models did not suggest any significant factors influencing site use by nest predators, revealing that all four species are habitat generalists adapted to co-existing in human altered landscapes. Furthermore, fragmentation and land cover changes may predispose nesting birds, herpetofauna, and small mammals to heightened predation risk by mesopredators in theNeotropics.
País:Repositorio UNA
Institución:Universidad Nacional de Costa Rica
Repositorio:Repositorio UNA
Lenguaje:Inglés
OAI Identifier:oai:null:11056/17863
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/11056/17863
Palabra clave:BIODIVERSITY
BIODIVERSIDAD
BIOGEOGRAPHY
BIOGEOGRAFÍA
CARNIVORES
CARNÍVOROS
CAMERA TRAPS
CÁMARAS TRAMPA
COATI
CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
BIOLOGÍA DE LA CONSERVACIÓN
ECOLOGY
ECOLOGÍA
FRAGMENTATION
FRAGMENTACIÓN
MAMMALS
MAMÍFEROS
NEOTROPICS
NEOTROPICOS
NEST PREDATORS
DEPREDADORES DE NIDOS
PINEAPPLE PRODUCTION
PRODUCCIÓN DE PIÑA
RACCOON
MAPACHE
OPOSSUM
ZARIGÜEYA
ZOOLOGY
ZOOLOGÍA