First national assessment of wildlife mortality in Ecuador: An effort from citizens and academia to collect roadkill data at country scale

Author:

Medrano‐Vizcaíno Pablo12ORCID,Brito‐Zapata David23ORCID,Rueda‐Vera Adriana24ORCID,Jarrín‐V Pablo5ORCID,García‐Carrasco José‐María6ORCID,Medina Diana7ORCID,Aguilar Juan8ORCID,Acosta‐Buenaño Néstor9ORCID,González‐Suárez Manuela1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, School of Biological Sciences University of Reading Reading UK

2. Red Ecuatoriana Para el Monitoreo de Fauna Atropellada‐REMFA Quito Ecuador

3. Universidad San Francisco de Quito USFQ, Instituto iBIOTROP, Museo de Zoología & Laboratorio de Zoología Terrestre Quito Ecuador

4. Instituto de Investigación en Biomedicina de la Universidad Central del Ecuador Quito Ecuador

5. Dirección de Innovación Instituto Nacional de Biodiversidad Quito Ecuador

6. Department of Animal Biology, Faculty of Science University of Málaga Málaga Spain

7. Parque Nacional Cayambe Coca Zona baja‐Ministerio del Ambiente, Agua, y Transición Ecológica del Ecuador El Chaco Ecuador

8. Escuela de Biología Universidad del Azuay Cuenca Ecuador

9. Ministerio del Ambiente, Agua, y Transición Ecológica del Ecuador Quito Ecuador

Abstract

AbstractEcuador has both high richness and high endemism, which are increasingly threatened by anthropic pressures, including roads. Research evaluating the effects of roads remains scarce, making it difficult to develop mitigation plans. Here, we present the first national assessment of wildlife mortality on roads that allow us to (1) estimate roadkill rates per species, (2) identify affected species and areas, and (3) reveal knowledge gaps. We bring together data from systematic surveys and citizen science efforts to present a dataset with 5010 wildlife roadkill records from 392 species, and we also provide 333 standardized corrected roadkill rates calculated on 242 species. Systematic surveys were reported by ten studies from five Ecuadorian provinces, revealing 242 species with corrected roadkill rates ranging from 0.03 to 171.72 ind./km/year. The highest rates were for the yellow warbler Setophaga petechia in Galapagos (171.72 ind./km/year), the cane toad Rhinella marina in Manabi (110.70 ind./km/year), and the Galapagos lava lizard Microlophus albemarlensis (47.17 ind./km/year). Citizen science and other nonsystematic monitoring provided 1705 roadkill records representing all 24 provinces in Ecuador and 262 identified species. The common opossum Didelphis marsupialis, the Andean white‐eared opossum Didelphis pernigra, and the yellow warbler Setophaga petechia were more commonly reported (250, 104, and 81 individuals, respectively). Across all sources, we found 15 species listed as “Threatened” and six as “Data Deficient” by the IUCN. We recommend stronger research efforts in areas where the mortality of endemic or threatened species could be critical for populations, such as in Galapagos. This first country‐wide assessment of wildlife mortality on Ecuadorian roads represents contributions from academia, members of the public, and government, underlining the value of wider engagement and collaboration. We hope these findings and the compiled dataset will guide sensible driving and sustainable planning of infrastructure in Ecuador and, ultimately, contribute to reduce wildlife mortality on roads.

Funder

University of Reading

Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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