Reptiles of the Serra das Torres Natural Monument: using the Rapid Assessment method to fill a knowledge gap in the Atlantic Forest of southeastern Brazil

Data on the composition of local reptile assemblages in several Brazilian ecosystems can still be considered relatively restricted in scope in most cases. In this study, we conducted surveys in the Serra das Torres Natural Monument, located in the municipalities of Atilio Vivacqua, Muqui, and Mimoso...

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Veröffentlicht in:BIOTA NEOTROPICA 2020-01, Vol.20 (2), p.1-11, Article 20190726
Hauptverfasser: de Oliveira, Jane C. F., dos Santos, Rafael, Lopes-Silva, Mateus Leite, Vasconcelos Barros, Lorena da Penha, Risse-Quaioto, Barbara, Militao, Catia Moura, Fatorelli, Pedro, Belmoch, Flavia A. L., de Castro, Thiago Marcial, Duarte Rocha, Carlos Frederico
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Data on the composition of local reptile assemblages in several Brazilian ecosystems can still be considered relatively restricted in scope in most cases. In this study, we conducted surveys in the Serra das Torres Natural Monument, located in the municipalities of Atilio Vivacqua, Muqui, and Mimoso do Sul, using the Rapid Assessments method (RAP) during 30 days in the rainy season of 2018. We sampled actively for approximately 1320 hours with a 6-10 person crew, supplemented by 720 hours of passive sampling (30 bucket-days) using pitfall traps with drift fences. We recorded 34 reptile species during our sampling method (2 amphisbaenid, 11 lizards, and 21 snakes) and an occasional encounter, after the end of sampling, that added a chelonian species to the list, Hydromedusa maximiliani, totaling 35 reptile species. The Dipsadidae was the family with the greatest snake species richness and, the Gymnophtalmidae had the greatest lizard species richness. The species richness recorded in the Serra das Torres Natural Monument (Ntotal = 35) represents ca. 27% of all reptile species found in the state of Espirito Santo (N = 130). The most abundant lizard species was Leposoma scincoides followed by Ecpleopus gaudichaudii and, the most abundant snake species was Bothrops jararaca being markedly higher than that recorded in similar studies. Twenty-seven percent of the reptile species recorded in our study are endemic to the Atlantic Forest and 30% (N = 10) have been recorded less than five times previously in the Brazilian state of Espirito Santo. Our study reinforces the need for the conservation of the Serra das Torres Natural Monument because of its importance as a reservoir of a considerable portion of the reptile biodiversity of Espirito Santo state, and of the Atlantic Forest biome as a whole.
ISSN:1676-0603
1676-0611
1806-129X
1676-0611
1676-0603
DOI:10.1590/1676-0611-BN-2019-0726