Abstract

Agricultural development was the major contributor to South America’s designation as the continent with the highest rates of forest loss from 2000–2012. As the apex predator in the Neotropics, jaguars (Panthera onca) are dependent on forest cover but the species’ response to habitat fragmentation in heterogeneous agricultural landscapes has not been a subject of extensive research. We used occupancy as a measure of jaguar habitat use in Colombia’s middle Magdalena River valley which, as part of the intercontinental Tumbes-Chocó-Magdalena biodiversity hotspot, is exceedingly fragmented by expanding cattle pastures and oil palm plantations. We used single-season occupancy models to analyze 9 months of data (2015–2016) from 70 camera trap sites. Given the middle Magdalena’s status as a “jaguar corridor” and our possible violation of the occupancy models’ demographic closure assumption, we interpreted our results as “probability of habitat use (Ψ)” by jaguars. We measured the associations between jaguar presence and coverage of forest, oil palm, and wetlands in radii buffers of 1, 3, and 5 km around each camera trap. Our camera traps recorded 77 jaguar detections at 25 of the camera trap sites (36%) during 15,305 trap nights. The probability of detecting jaguars, given their presence at a site, was 0.28 (0.03 SE). In the top-ranked model, jaguar habitat use was positively influenced by wetland coverage (β = 7.16, 3.20 SE) and negatively influenced by cattle pastures (β = -1.40, 0.63 SE), both in the 3 km buffers. We conclude that wetlands may serve as keystone habitats for jaguars in landscapes fragmented by cattle ranches and oil palm plantations. Greater focus on wetland preservation could facilitate jaguar persistence in one of the most important yet vulnerable areas of their distribution.

Highlights

  • South American rainforests experienced the highest rates of deforestation globally from 2000– 2012 [1]

  • Our study evaluated jaguar habitat use in a heterogeneous landscape of the middle Magdalena in an attempt to elucidate the habitat requirements associated with the species’ presence at three spatial scales: 1, 3, and 5 km radii buffers surrounding each camera trap

  • Three unique females with cubs were photographed at 3 separate camera trap sites during September 2015 and March and April 2016

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Summary

Introduction

South American rainforests experienced the highest rates of deforestation globally from 2000– 2012 [1]. Large carnivores in the Neotropics are especially susceptible to the effects of forest loss and fragmentation due to their occurrence at low densities [2], propensity for conflict with humans [3,4], and dependence on landscape connectivity [5,6,7]. Jaguars are the largest felid in the Americas and the largest terrestrial carnivore in the Neotropics. They favor tropical lowland habitats with sufficient natural cover and access to water and prey [9,10,11] but the species inhabits numerous biomes ranging from tropical moist and tropical dry forests to coastal mangroves and herbaceous lowland grasslands [11,12]. Jaguar home ranges vary considerably in relation to prey abundance, habitat quality, and rates of human disturbance [13]

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