Activity Patterns of Native Carnivores in Central Chile: Are They Influenced by Landscape Type?

Author:

Ramírez-Alvarez Diego1ORCID,Arenas-Rodríguez Kathia2,Kaiser Melanie3ORCID,Napolitano Constanza456ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Unidad de Vida Silvestre, Servicio Agrícola y Ganadero, Región de O’Higgins, Rancagua 2820000, Chile

2. Departamento de Ciencias Ecológicas, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Chile, Santiago 8460000, Chile

3. Fundación Con Garra, Región de Los Lagos, Puerto Varas 5551819, Chile

4. Departamento de Ciencias Biológicas y Biodiversidad, Universidad de Los Lagos, Osorno 5311157, Chile

5. Institute of Ecology and Biodiversity (IEB), Concepción 4070374, Chile

6. Cape Horn International Center (CHIC), Puerto Williams 6350000, Chile

Abstract

Landscapes can be selectively used by different carnivore species, leading to habitat specialization, which acts as a limiting resource for maintaining healthy populations. Between 1 March 2021 and 31 March 2022, we set up 30 camera traps in three different landscapes of central Chile: (a) Mediterranean coastal sclerophyllous forest (SF), (b) Mediterranean coastal thorn forest (TF), and (c) exotic monoculture tree plantations (MP), with a total capture effort of 10,046 camera-days (3098 TF, 3446 MP, and 3502 SF). We described the daily activity patterns for each native carnivore species recorded in each landscape, based on the density of independent records per hour of the day. We assessed the overlap between the activity patterns of each carnivore species in the different macrohabitats based on their coefficient of overlapping (Δ). We identified 9120 carnivore records, corresponding to 3888 independent events: 3140 for Lycalopex fox species, 276 for guiña Leopardus guigna, 434 for skunk Conepatus chinga, and 38 for the lesser grison Galictis cuja. Our study revealed differences of activity patterns with high to medium overlap, among landscape types for C. chinga and Lycalopex spp.—for skunk, between native forests and exotic monoculture tree plantations, and for foxes, among all landscape types. The carnivore community of the highly anthropized central Chile is mostly composed of habitat generalists and habitat specialists with high adaptability to landscape fragmentation, which has been crucial for their long-term survival.

Funder

Universidad de O’Higgins

Codelco El Teniente Chile

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference62 articles.

1. Community Structure of South American Carnivores in the Past and Present;Prevosti;J. Mamm. Evol.,2014

2. Conservation Biology and Carnivore Conservation in the Rocky Mountains;Noss;Conserv. Biol.,1996

3. Multi-scale, multivariate community models improve designation of biodiversity hotspots in the Sunda Islands;Chiaverini;Anim. Conserv.,2022

4. “When the felid’s away, the mesocarnivores play”: Seasonal temporal segregation in a neotropical carnivore guild;Finnegan;Mamm. Biol.,2021

5. Ramírez-Álvarez, D. (2018). Fauna Nativa de la Región de O’Higgins Chile: Vertebrados Terrestres, El Centro de Información de Recursos Naturales (CIREN).

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