Abstract

The role that mammalian carnivores play in ecosystems can be deeply altered by human-driven habitat disturbance. While most carnivore species are negatively affected, the impact of habitat changes is expected to depend on their ecological flexibility. We aimed to identify key factors affecting the habitat use by four sympatric carnivore species in landscapes of central Argentina. Camera trapping surveys were carried out at 49 sites from 2011 to 2013. Each site was characterized by 12 habitat attributes, including human disturbance and fragmentation. Four landscape gradients were created from Principal Component Analysis and their influence on species-specific habitat use was studied using Generalized Linear Models. We recorded 74 events of Conepatus chinga, 546 of Pseudalopex gymnocercus, 193 of Leopardus geoffroyi and 45 of Puma concolor. We found that the gradient describing sites away from urban settlements and with low levels of disturbance had the strongest influence. L. geoffroyi was the only species responding significantly to the four gradients and showing a positive response to modified habitats, which could be favored by the low level of persecution by humans. P. concolor made stronger use of most preserved sites with low proportion of cropland, even though the species also used sites with an intermediate level of fragmentation. A more flexible use of space was found for C. chinga and P. gymnocercus. Our results demonstrate that the impact of human activities spans across this guild of carnivores and that species-specific responses appear to be mediated by ecological and behavioral attributes.

Highlights

  • The joint impact of lack of protection, habitat alteration, and direct killing has had an especially strong effect on mammalian carnivores, reducing their diversity and occurrence [1, 2]

  • In this study we aimed to test the following predictions: 1) given that the populations of pumas in our study area appear to be heavily affected by anthropogenic pressure [33], we predicted that this species would avoid the areas fragmented and modified by human activity and would be associated with the most preserved habitats

  • We obtained a total of 858 events of the four carnivore species (74 for skunks, 546 for Pampas foxes, 193 for Geoffroy’s cats, and 45 for pumas), with an average of 18 carnivore events per site

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Summary

Introduction

The joint impact of lack of protection, habitat alteration, and direct killing has had an especially strong effect on mammalian carnivores, reducing their diversity and occurrence [1, 2]. Carnivores are vulnerable to local extinction in these types of landscapes because of their comparatively large home ranges, low population numbers, and direct persecution by humans mostly due to hunting for the skin trade and predator control [4]. Both the amount of suitable habitat in a landscape and its level of fragmentation are important predictors of the distribution and abundance of biological populations [5, 6]. In addition to the indirect effect of habitat modification, direct anthropogenic impacts, such as mortality caused by vehicle impacts on roads or human-wildlife conflicts, can affect the distribution and abundance of a species [7,8,9]

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