Spatiotemporal Coexistence of Mesopredators and Their Prey in a Defaunated Neotropical Rainforest

IF 1.7 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
J. J. Flores-Martínez, R. Coates, V. Sánchez‐Cordero, Jesús Alejandro Ríos-Solís, B. Luna-Olivera, Marcelino Ramírez-Ibáñez, M. Lavariega
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Abstract

Background and Research Aims Forest loss and fragmentation have a negative impact on large-sized predators and prey, whose populations are reduced or extirpated locally. We explored the spatiotemporal coexistence of the mesopredators (< 15 kg) coyote, ocelot, and white-nosed coati, with their potential prey (< 15 kg) Mexican agouti, lowland paca, and collared peccary in a defaunated rainforest. Methods We used two-species occupancy-detection models between mesopredators and their potential prey, overlap index of circular models, and latency time measurements to evaluate temporal and spatial segregation and habitat use of species. Results Presence of ocelot and coyote was influenced by an increase in the detectability and occupancy of the Mexican agouti. Among most mesopredator–prey species pairs, the correlation for both the capture rates at camera-trap stations and the 1-hr intervals were mainly moderate or low. Some mesopredator–prey species pairs showed low or inverse correlations suggesting species avoidance. The Mexican agouti exhibited a significant negative correlation with the presence of mesopredators. The coyote and ocelot showed a positive correlation with their use of low use trails by people. Conclusions Spatiotemporal tolerance was observed among mesopredator omnivores and prey herbivores. High temporal overlap of ocelots and potential prey (lowland paca) was observed compared to other tropical forests holding large-sized predators, suggesting behavioral shifts for increasing mesopredator–prey encounters. Furthermore, mesopredator coexistence was mediated by a displacement in the temporal peaks of activity and spatial segregation among species. Implications for Conservation Defaunated tropical forests need protection to ensure the conservation of remaining species and their ecological interactions.
退化热带雨林中捕食者及其猎物的时空共存
背景与研究目的森林的消失和破碎化对大型捕食者和猎物产生了负面影响,使其种群在当地减少或灭绝。在退化的热带雨林中,我们探索了中掠食性动物(< 15 kg)土狼、豹猫和白鼻长鼻浣熊与其潜在猎物(< 15 kg)墨西哥刺鼠、低地paca和颈背美洲狮的时空共存。方法采用中捕食者与潜在猎物之间的两种占用检测模型、圆形模型的重叠指数和潜伏期测量来评估物种的时空隔离和栖息地利用。结果豹猫和土狼的存在受墨西哥刺鼠检出率和占用率增加的影响。在大多数中捕食者-猎物物种对中,相机诱捕站捕获率与1小时间隔的相关性主要为中等或低。一些中捕食者-猎物物种对表现出低相关性或负相关性,表明物种回避。墨西哥刺鼠与中掠食者的存在呈显著负相关。土狼和豹猫与人类对低利用率路径的使用呈正相关。结论中食性杂食动物和食性食草动物存在时空耐受性。与其他拥有大型食肉动物的热带森林相比,观察到豹猫和潜在猎物(低地paca)的高时间重叠,这表明行为转变增加了中掠食者-猎物相遇。此外,中捕食者的共存是由活动高峰的位移和物种间的空间隔离所介导的。退化的热带森林需要保护,以确保保留的物种及其生态相互作用得到保护。
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来源期刊
Tropical Conservation Science
Tropical Conservation Science BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION-
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
5.90%
发文量
16
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Tropical Conservation Science is a peer-reviewed, open access journal that publishes original research papers and state-of-the-art reviews of broad interest to the field of conservation of tropical forests and of other tropical ecosystems.
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