4.2 Article

Response of mesocarnivores to anthropogenic landscape intensification: activity patterns and guild temporal interactions

期刊

JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY
卷 102, 期 4, 页码 1149-1164

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jmammal/gyab074

关键词

activity pattern; agricultural landscapes; camera traps; free-roaming dogs; intraguild competition; land-use intensification; Leopardus guigna; mesocarnivores; temporal segregation

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资金

  1. Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Cientifico y Tecnologico (FONDECYT) [11170850]
  2. Chilean National Agency for Research and Development (ANID)
  3. Chilean Ministry of the Environment [FPA 9-I-009-12]
  4. Robertson Foundation
  5. Recanati-Kaplan Centre
  6. Chilean National Commission for Scientific and Technological Research (CONICYT-Becas Chile)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

In agricultural landscapes, high land-use intensification leads to nocturnal tendencies in mesocarnivores, potentially impacting species fitness. High intensification decreases activity overlap between native and domestic animals, but increases overlap between native species.
Carnivores face important anthropogenic threats in agricultural areas from habitat loss and fragmentation, disturbance by domestic free-roaming dogs and cats, and direct hunting by humans. Anthropogenic disturbances are shifting the activity patterns of wild animals, likely modifying species interactions. We estimated changes in the activity patterns of the mesocarnivore guild of agricultural landscapes of the La Araucania region in southern Chile in response to land-use intensification, comparing intra- and interspecific activity patterns at low and high levels of forest cover, fragmentation, and land ownership subdivision. Our focal species comprise the guina or kod-kod (Leopardus guigna), two fox species (Lycalopex culpaeus and L. griseus), a skunk (Conepatus chinga), and one native mustelid (Galictis cuja), in addition to free-roaming dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) and cats (Felis catus) and their main mammalian prey species (i.e., Rodentia and Lagomorpha). In 23,373 trap nights, we totaled 21,729 independent records of our focal species. Our results show tendencies toward nocturnality at high land-use intensification, with potential impacts on species fitness. Nocturnal mesocarnivores decreased their diurnal/crepuscular activity, while cathemeral activity shifted to nocturnal activity at high land-use intensification, but only when in sympatry with a competitor. High land-use intensification decreased the activity overlap between native and domestic mesocarnivores but increased the overlap between native mesocarnivores. High intensification also reduced overlap with prey species. Notably, foxes displayed peaks of activity opposing those of dogs, and plasticity in activity pattern when in sympatry with dogs, such as strategies to avoid encounters. We stress the need to suppress the free-roaming and unsupervised activity of dogs to mitigate impacts of high land-use intensification on mesocarnivores.

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