IUCN / SSC Cat Specialist Group - Digital Cat Library
   

 

View printer friendly
Dechner, A.; Flecher, K.M.; Lindell, C.; Vega de Oliveira, T.; Maurer, B.A.
Determining carnivore habitat use in a rubber/ forest landscape in Brazil using multispecies occupancy models
2018  PLoS ONE (13): 1-18

Understanding the factors that influence the presence and distribution of carnivores in human-dominated agricultural landscapes is one of the main challenges for biodiversity conservation, especially in landscapes where setting aside large protected areas is not feasible. Habitat use models of carnivore communities in rubber plantations are lacking despite the critical roles carnivores play in structuring ecosystems and the increasing expansion of rubber plantations. We investigated the habitat use of a mammalian carnivore community within a 4,200-ha rubber plantation/forest landscape in Bahia, Brazil. We placed two different brands of camera traps in a 90-site grid. We used a multispecies occupancy model to determine the probabilities of habitat use by each species and the effect of different brands of camera traps on their detection probabilities. Species showed significant differences in habitat use with domestic dogs (_Canis familiaris_) and crab-eating foxes (_Cerdocyon thous_) having higher probabilities of using rubber groves and coatis (_Nasua nasua_) having a higher probability of using forest. The moderate level of captures and low detection probabilities (< 0.1) of tayras (_Eira barbara_) and wildcats (_Leopardus spp_.) precluded a precise estimation of habitat use probabilities using the multispecies occupancy model. The different brands of camera traps had a significant effect on the detection probability of all species. Given that the carnivore community has persisted in this 70-year-old landscape, the results show the potential of rubber/forest landscapes to provide for the long-term conservation of carnivore communities in the Atlantic Forest, especially in mosaics with 30-40% forest cover and guard patrolling systems. The results also provide insights for mitigating the impact of rubber production on biodiversity.

PDF files are only accessible to Friends of the Cat Group. Joining Friends of the Cat Group gives you unlimited access and downloads in the Cat SG Library for one year, and allows you to receive our newsletter Cat News (2 regular issues per year plus special issues). More information how to join here

 

(c) IUCN/SSC Cat Specialist Group ( IUCN - The World Conservation Union)