Tayra (eira barbara) landscape use as a function of cover types, forest protection, and the presence of puma and free-ranging dogs
The tayra (Eira barbara) is a common and broadly distributed Neotropical carnivore, yet is not well-studied. While this species is apparently associated with forested habitats, it also appears tolerant of some anthropogenic disturbance. We deployed 57 unbaited camera traps (n = 4,923 trap-days) in...
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Zusammenfassung: | The tayra (Eira barbara) is a common and broadly distributed Neotropical
carnivore, yet is not well-studied. While this species is apparently
associated with forested habitats, it also appears tolerant of some
anthropogenic disturbance. We deployed 57 unbaited camera traps (n = 4,923
trap-days) in and around a protected area (Furnas do Bom Jesus State Park,
São Paulo, Brazil) to survey for tayra and two potentially interactive
species: puma (Puma concolor) and free-ranging dogs (Canis familiaris). We
used encounter histories generated from photographs and occupancy models
to quantify tayra landscape use in the human-dominated landscape composed
of the protected area that was near a city and surrounded by agricultural
lands dominated by small farms. We fit co-occurrence models to understand
whether puma and free-ranging dogs affected landscape use by tayra. We
detected tayra at 44% of sites and found that tayra landscape use
increased with the proportion of forest cover within 500m of the sampling
site. Other factors predicting tayra landscape use included whether the
sampling site was within the protected area, its distance to water, and
slope. Dogs, which are common on the periphery of the protected area, seem
to have a weak negative effect on tayra landscape use. Because of the
concentration of forest within the park, this is an important protected
area for the carnivore population within this human-modified landscape.
Thus, environmental variables, such as forest cover, distance to water, as
well as administrative protection status, are important for understanding
local-scale tayra distribution. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.0cfxpnw2g |