When roads appear jaguars decline: Increased access to an Amazonian wilderness area reduces potential for jaguar conservation

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Abstract

Roads are a main threat to biodiversity conservation in the Amazon, in part, because roads increase access for hunters. We examine how increased landscape access by hunters may lead to cascading effects that influence the prey community and abundance of the jaguar (Panthera onca), the top Amazonian terrestrial predator. Understanding such ecological effects originating from anthropogenic actions is essential for conservation and management of wildlife populations in areas undergoing infrastructure development. Our study was conducted in Yasuní Biosphere Reserve, the protected area with highest potential for jaguar conservation in Ecuador, and an area both threatened by road development and inhabited by indigenous groups dependent upon bushmeat. We surveyed prey and jaguar abundance with camera traps in four sites that differed in accessibility to hunters and used site occupancy and spatially explicit capture-recapture analyses to evaluate prey occurrence and estimate jaguar density, respectively. Higher landscape accessibility to hunters was linked with lower occurrence and biomass of game, particularly white-lipped peccary (Tayassu pecari) and collared peccary (Pecari tajacu), the primary game for hunters and prey for jaguars. Jaguar density was up to 18 times higher in the most remote site compared to the most accessible site. Our results provide a strong case for the need to: 1) consider conservation of large carnivores and other wildlife in policies about road construction in protected areas, 2) coordinate conservation initiatives with local governments so that development activities do not conflict with conservation objectives, and 3) promote development of community-based strategies for wildlife management that account for the needs of large carnivores.

Figures

  • Fig 1. Camera trap arrays in four sites in Yasunı́ Biosphere Reserve ordered from low to high human access. A) Lorocachi; B) Tiputini; C) Keweriono; D) Maxus Road.
  • Table 1. Hunter’s accessibility at four study sites in Yasunı́. Accessibility is measured as distance (mean km ± SD) of camera traps to three sources of access: roads, rivers and settlements.
  • Table 2. Occupancy models for jaguar prey in Yasunı́. Untransformed estimates of coefficients for covariates β (SE) to predict prey probability of site occupancyΨ as a function of: distance to nearest road or river (RR), distance to nearest settlement (ST) and habitat (H). Detection probability p is modeled as a function of distance between paired cameras (DC) or as constant (.).
  • Fig 2. Probability of site occupancy of eight important jaguar prey species at four sites in Yasunı́ Biosphere Reserve. Sites are arranged from least to most accessible (dark to light). As a point of clarification, white-lipped peccaries were never recorded in camera traps at Keweriono, however, occupancy models predict a small probability of occurrence of this species at this site based on covariates.
  • Table 3. Biomass of jaguar prey at four sites in Yasunı́ Biosphere Reserve. Data are the average of biomass indexes (kg/day) for camera trap stations at each site. Lorocachi and Tiputini are the most isolated sites and Keweriono and Maxus Road are the most accessible sites.
  • Fig 3. Relationship between ungulate prey biomass and landscape accessibility measured as distance from camera trap stations (km) to settlements (A), roads (B) and rivers (C). Data points are an index of ungulate biomass (kg/day) at each station.
  • Fig 4. Jaguar density estimates at four sites in Yasunı́ Biosphere Reserve. Sites are arranged from least accessible to most accessible. Error bars correspond to SD and SE for Bayesian-SECR and N̂=ETAmethods respectively.

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APA

Espinosa, S., Celis, G., & Branch, L. C. (2018). When roads appear jaguars decline: Increased access to an Amazonian wilderness area reduces potential for jaguar conservation. PLoS ONE, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189740

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