Niche partitioning among Mesocarnivores in a brazilian wetland.

Was investigated the home range size, habitat selection, as well as the spatial and activity overlap, of four mid-sized carnivore species in the Central Pantanal, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil. From December 2005 to September 2008, seven crab-eating foxes Cerdocyon thous, seven brown-nosed coatis Nasua nasua, and six ocelots Leopardus pardalis were radio-collared and monitored. Camera trap data on these species were also collected for the crab-eating raccoon Procyon cancrivorus. Was hypothesized that there would be large niche differentiation in preferred habitat-type or active period between generalist species with similar diet, and higher similarity in habitat-type or activity time between the generalist species (crab-eating foxes and coatis) and the more specialized ocelot. Individual home ranges were estimated using the utilization distribution index (UD? 95% fixed Kernel). With data obtained from radio-collared individuals, we evaluated habitat selection using compositional analysis. Median home range size of ocelots was 8 km2. The proportionof habitats within the home ranges of ocelots did not differ from the overall habitat proportionin the study area, but ocelots preferentially used forest within their home range. The median home range size of crab-eating foxes was 1.4 km2 . Foxes showed second-order habitat selection and selected savanna over shrub-savanna vegetation. The median home range size for coati was 1.5 km2 . Coati home ranges were located randomly in the study area. However, within their home range, coatis occurred more frequently in savanna than in other vegetation types. Among the four species, the overlap in activity period was the highest (87%) between ocelots and raccoons, with the least overlap occurring between the ocelot and coati (25%). It is suggest that temporal segregation of carnivores was more importantthan spatial segregation, notably between the generalist coati, crab-eating fox and crab-eating raccoon.

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Main Authors: BIANCHI, R. de C., OLIFIERS, N., GOMPPER, M. E., MOURAO, G.
Other Authors: RITA DE CASSIA BIANCHI, UNIVERSIDADE ESTADUAL PAULISTA “JÚLIO DE MESQUITA FILHO”; NATALIE OLIFIERS, IOC- FIOCRUZ; MATTHEW E. GOMPPER, UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI; GUILHERME DE MIRANDA MOURAO, CPAP.
Format: Separatas biblioteca
Language:pt_BR
por
Published: 2016-12-16
Subjects:Procyon cancrivorus., Comportamento animal, Habitat, Niches, Leopardus pardalis, Cerdocyon thous, Nasua nasua, animal behavior.,
Online Access:http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1058808
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spelling dig-alice-doc-10588082017-08-16T03:55:43Z Niche partitioning among Mesocarnivores in a brazilian wetland. BIANCHI, R. de C. OLIFIERS, N. GOMPPER, M. E. MOURAO, G. RITA DE CASSIA BIANCHI, UNIVERSIDADE ESTADUAL PAULISTA “JÚLIO DE MESQUITA FILHO”; NATALIE OLIFIERS, IOC- FIOCRUZ; MATTHEW E. GOMPPER, UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI; GUILHERME DE MIRANDA MOURAO, CPAP. Procyon cancrivorus. Comportamento animal Habitat Niches Leopardus pardalis Cerdocyon thous Nasua nasua animal behavior. Was investigated the home range size, habitat selection, as well as the spatial and activity overlap, of four mid-sized carnivore species in the Central Pantanal, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil. From December 2005 to September 2008, seven crab-eating foxes Cerdocyon thous, seven brown-nosed coatis Nasua nasua, and six ocelots Leopardus pardalis were radio-collared and monitored. Camera trap data on these species were also collected for the crab-eating raccoon Procyon cancrivorus. Was hypothesized that there would be large niche differentiation in preferred habitat-type or active period between generalist species with similar diet, and higher similarity in habitat-type or activity time between the generalist species (crab-eating foxes and coatis) and the more specialized ocelot. Individual home ranges were estimated using the utilization distribution index (UD? 95% fixed Kernel). With data obtained from radio-collared individuals, we evaluated habitat selection using compositional analysis. Median home range size of ocelots was 8 km2. The proportionof habitats within the home ranges of ocelots did not differ from the overall habitat proportionin the study area, but ocelots preferentially used forest within their home range. The median home range size of crab-eating foxes was 1.4 km2 . Foxes showed second-order habitat selection and selected savanna over shrub-savanna vegetation. The median home range size for coati was 1.5 km2 . Coati home ranges were located randomly in the study area. However, within their home range, coatis occurred more frequently in savanna than in other vegetation types. Among the four species, the overlap in activity period was the highest (87%) between ocelots and raccoons, with the least overlap occurring between the ocelot and coati (25%). It is suggest that temporal segregation of carnivores was more importantthan spatial segregation, notably between the generalist coati, crab-eating fox and crab-eating raccoon. 2016-12-16T11:11:11Z 2016-12-16T11:11:11Z 2016-12-16 2016 2017-07-25T11:11:11Z Separatas Plos One, v.11, n. 9, p. 1-17, 2016. http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1058808 10.1371/journal.pone.0162893 S pt_BR por openAccess
institution EMBRAPA
collection DSpace
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-alice
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema de bibliotecas de EMBRAPA
language pt_BR
por
topic Procyon cancrivorus.
Comportamento animal
Habitat
Niches
Leopardus pardalis
Cerdocyon thous
Nasua nasua
animal behavior.
Procyon cancrivorus.
Comportamento animal
Habitat
Niches
Leopardus pardalis
Cerdocyon thous
Nasua nasua
animal behavior.
spellingShingle Procyon cancrivorus.
Comportamento animal
Habitat
Niches
Leopardus pardalis
Cerdocyon thous
Nasua nasua
animal behavior.
Procyon cancrivorus.
Comportamento animal
Habitat
Niches
Leopardus pardalis
Cerdocyon thous
Nasua nasua
animal behavior.
BIANCHI, R. de C.
OLIFIERS, N.
GOMPPER, M. E.
MOURAO, G.
Niche partitioning among Mesocarnivores in a brazilian wetland.
description Was investigated the home range size, habitat selection, as well as the spatial and activity overlap, of four mid-sized carnivore species in the Central Pantanal, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil. From December 2005 to September 2008, seven crab-eating foxes Cerdocyon thous, seven brown-nosed coatis Nasua nasua, and six ocelots Leopardus pardalis were radio-collared and monitored. Camera trap data on these species were also collected for the crab-eating raccoon Procyon cancrivorus. Was hypothesized that there would be large niche differentiation in preferred habitat-type or active period between generalist species with similar diet, and higher similarity in habitat-type or activity time between the generalist species (crab-eating foxes and coatis) and the more specialized ocelot. Individual home ranges were estimated using the utilization distribution index (UD? 95% fixed Kernel). With data obtained from radio-collared individuals, we evaluated habitat selection using compositional analysis. Median home range size of ocelots was 8 km2. The proportionof habitats within the home ranges of ocelots did not differ from the overall habitat proportionin the study area, but ocelots preferentially used forest within their home range. The median home range size of crab-eating foxes was 1.4 km2 . Foxes showed second-order habitat selection and selected savanna over shrub-savanna vegetation. The median home range size for coati was 1.5 km2 . Coati home ranges were located randomly in the study area. However, within their home range, coatis occurred more frequently in savanna than in other vegetation types. Among the four species, the overlap in activity period was the highest (87%) between ocelots and raccoons, with the least overlap occurring between the ocelot and coati (25%). It is suggest that temporal segregation of carnivores was more importantthan spatial segregation, notably between the generalist coati, crab-eating fox and crab-eating raccoon.
author2 RITA DE CASSIA BIANCHI, UNIVERSIDADE ESTADUAL PAULISTA “JÚLIO DE MESQUITA FILHO”; NATALIE OLIFIERS, IOC- FIOCRUZ; MATTHEW E. GOMPPER, UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI; GUILHERME DE MIRANDA MOURAO, CPAP.
author_facet RITA DE CASSIA BIANCHI, UNIVERSIDADE ESTADUAL PAULISTA “JÚLIO DE MESQUITA FILHO”; NATALIE OLIFIERS, IOC- FIOCRUZ; MATTHEW E. GOMPPER, UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI; GUILHERME DE MIRANDA MOURAO, CPAP.
BIANCHI, R. de C.
OLIFIERS, N.
GOMPPER, M. E.
MOURAO, G.
format Separatas
topic_facet Procyon cancrivorus.
Comportamento animal
Habitat
Niches
Leopardus pardalis
Cerdocyon thous
Nasua nasua
animal behavior.
author BIANCHI, R. de C.
OLIFIERS, N.
GOMPPER, M. E.
MOURAO, G.
author_sort BIANCHI, R. de C.
title Niche partitioning among Mesocarnivores in a brazilian wetland.
title_short Niche partitioning among Mesocarnivores in a brazilian wetland.
title_full Niche partitioning among Mesocarnivores in a brazilian wetland.
title_fullStr Niche partitioning among Mesocarnivores in a brazilian wetland.
title_full_unstemmed Niche partitioning among Mesocarnivores in a brazilian wetland.
title_sort niche partitioning among mesocarnivores in a brazilian wetland.
publishDate 2016-12-16
url http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1058808
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