Range-wide factors shaping space use and movements by the Neotropic’s flagship predator: the jaguar

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Authors

Jeffrey James Thompson, Ronaldo Morato, Bernardo Brandão Niebuhr, Vanesa Bejarano Alegre, Júlia Emi F. Oshima, Alan E. de Barros, Agustín Paviolo, J. Antonio de la Torre, Fernando Lima, Roy T. McBride

Abstract

The range-wide management of the jaguar (Panthera onca) depends upon maintaining core populations connected through multi-national, transboundary cooperation, which is dependent upon understanding the movement ecology and space use of jaguars throughout their range. Using 117 telemetry trajectories from 12 ecoregions, we examined the landscape-level environmental and anthropogenic factors related to jaguar home range size and movement parameters. Range-wide and at the ecoregional scale home range size decreased with increasing net productivity and increased with increasing road density. Also, range-wide, home range size decreased with increasing forest cover and decreasing human population density. Movement within home ranges was best explained by a different set of environmental covariates. Range-wide predictions of home range size were consistent with expectations based upon density estimates. Our findings provide a mechanism to evaluate range-wide habitat quality for jaguars and an inferential modeling framework that can be adapted to the conservation of other large terrestrial carnivores.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.32942/osf.io/k2hqz

Subjects

Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Life Sciences, Other Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Keywords

AKDE, apex predator, home range, jaguar, Neotropics, Panthera onca, telemetry

Dates

Published: 2020-09-01 11:43

License

CC-By Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International