scholarly journals Monitoring species of mammals using track collection by rangers in the Tilarán mountain range, Costa Rica

2015 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 249-257
Author(s):  
J. Edgardo Arévalo ◽  
Yoryineth Méndez ◽  
Sergio Vargas

Although monitoring of animal populations for informed decision making is fundamental for the conservation and management of biodiversity, monitoring programs are not widely implemented. In addition, monitoring plans often represent an economic burden for many conservation organizations. Here we report on the monitoring of five focal species of mammals in the Tilarán mountain range, Costa Rica. We used a participatory approach in which trained rangers of four institutions conducted trail surveys in an area of ca 50,000ha to determine the presence/absence of the paca (Cuniculus paca), collared peccary (Pecari tajacu), tapir (Tapirus bairdii), jaguar (Panthera onca) and puma (Puma concolor) using track collections. Permanent transects of 3 km were sampled on the same day every month in 2000-01 (141 km) and 2009-10 (303 km). Four of the five focal species were registered in our sampling. One of the most valuable outcomes of the study was the initiative of the rangers to train community members to participate in the monitoring plan. We believe that this participatory approach not only has great potential for the integration of rangers in long term monitoring, but also the incorporation of citizen science-based programs. Multi-institutional collaboration for species monitoring could reduce costs and increase the sampling effort.

2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (36) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald Sánchez Porras ◽  
Liz Brenes cambonero ◽  
Kevin Chavarría Esquivel ◽  
Yeison Mejías Vásquez

Con el uso de cámaras trampa se registraron y analizaron las poblaciones de mamíferos terrestres medianos y grandes presentes en el sendero Pájaro Sombrilla, dentro de la Reserva Biológica Alberto Manuel Brenes, Alajuela, Costa Rica. La investigación se realizó desde agosto de 2017 a septiembre de 2018, y abarcó las temporadas seca y lluviosa. Con un esfuerzo de muestreo de 1584 días-trampa, se captaron 21 especies de mamíferos pertenecientes a 7 órdenes y 15 familias. Se registraron 10 especies de carnívoros, este fue el orden más representado. El estudio mostró una riqueza específica de S=21. El índice de Margalef obtuvo una diversidad alta (seca Dmg=2.47, lluviosa Dmg= 3.09), además el índice de Pielou indicó que en ambas temporadas se mantuvo abundancia de media a alta (seca e= 0.69, lluviosa e=0.69). El índice de Shannon-Wiener mostró una diversidad moderada (H´=2.04; seca H´= 1.86, lluviosa H´= 2.03). La prueba de Hutchenson reflejó que el índice de Shannon-Wiener es significativo, así la época lluviosa se diferencia de la época seca (t=1.69; p=0.05; gl=619). Se capturó un 95.45% de las especies terrestres de mamíferos medianos y grandes existentes en el sendero Pájaro Sombrilla, según los resultados de la curva de acumulación de especies. En relación con el índice de abundancia relativa calculado, las especies más abundantes fueron Pecari tajacu (IAR=18.50), Leopardus pardalis (IAR=2.21), Puma concolor (IAR=2.15) y la familia Didelphidae (IAR=2.78). En cuanto a los patrones de actividad, P. tajacu presentó actividad diurna (6:00-20:00). L. pardalis tuvo actividad catameral con dos picos máximos (6:00-8:00 y el otro de 22:00 - 24:00), P. concolor presentó actividad catameral con máximos de actividad a las (14:00-16:00 y 22:00-24:00). Los datos que se presentan en esta investigación pueden ser útiles para la creación de programas de manejo y conservación de la Reserva, sus especies y las interacciones entre estas.


Karstenia ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Carlos Rojas ◽  
Pedro A. Rojas ◽  
Steven L. Stephenson

Long-term monitoring and phenological patterns of microbial communities are rare in the scientific literature. Myxomycetes have life cycle characteristics that allow both to be documented. The present study summarizes the integrated floristic and bioclimatic components of a 30-month assessment of myxomycete sporocarps in a premontane tropical forest in Turrialba, Costa Rica. Based on monthly visits and a standard sampling effort of 120 minutes per visit, myxomycetes were recorded on leaves, twigs, and logs on the ground by two to three people in 20-minute periods associated with six different collecting sites within a 34-hectare successional forest patch. Biological data were analyzed using three recorded climatic variables obtained <em>in situ</em> during the complete period of study. Also, the Oceanic Niño Index (ONI), provided by NOAA, an estimate of El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO), was evaluated in the analyses. Overall, 54 species and 2245 records of myxomycetes were recorded, with an average of 14.5 species (range between 6-24) and 78.4 records (range between 20-110) detected each month. In general, neither the number of records nor the number of species were associated with individual climate variables, but multiple regression analyses showed that a combination of the accumulated precipitation of the four days before sampling and the average relative humidity can explain most of the fruiting dynamics (R2 = 0.56). When the ONI index was included in the analyses, the explained variability increased (R2 = 0.64), and when a categorization of months based on the same index was used, analyses showed that both the number of records and species evenness were affected by ENSO. At the species level, <em>Hemitrichia calyculata</em> was the only species observed during every month, closely followed by <em>Arcyria cinerea</em>, <em>A. denudata</em>, and <em>Physarum compressum</em>, recorded on most visits. Sporadic fruiting in some species such as <em>Tubifera microsperma</em>, <em>P. tenerum</em>, <em>P. bogoriense</em>, <em>P. melleum</em>, and <em>Metatrichia vesparia</em> could have been associated with local climate oscillations influenced by ENSO patterns. Phenological patterns were observed at the species level, indicating that in the Neotropics, under favorable conditions, myxomycete sporocarps are practically always present, but species assemblages vary temporally. These variations are primarily driven by local climate, but regional climate dynamics also affect fruiting patterns. Presumably, the remaining ecological effect on fruiting patterns in the Neotropics can be attributed to certain finer factors such as ecosystem structure, substrate quality/ availability, and biotic interactions. As such, phenomena such as climate change can have an important effect on the production of sporocarps by tropical myxomycetes, with subsequent effects of their ecological dynamics.


2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 131-137
Author(s):  
Arroyo-Arce Stephanny Arroyo-Arce ◽  
Ian Thomson ◽  
Roberto Salom-Pérez

Poca información ha sido generada sobre la biodiversidad del Refugio Nacional de Vida Silvestre Barra del Colorado, Costa Rica. En el presente estudio determinamos la abundancia relativa y el patrón de actividad de ciertas especies de mamíferos terrestres. Durante el periodo 2014 se empleamos diez cámaras trampa, las cuales fueron distribuidas dentro del refugio. Después de un total de 1 611 noches de muestreo, se identificaron 15 especies de mamíferos distribuidos en siete órdenes y 11 familias. Las especies más abundantes fueron Dasyprocta punctata, Leopardus pardalis, Tayassu pecari,Mazama temama, Pecari tajacu y Tapirus bairdii, mientras que Tamandua mexicana reportó la menor abundancia. Se estimaron los patrones de actividad para ocho especies, los cuales fueron similares a lo previamente descrito en la literatura. Estudios adicionales son necesarios con el fin de incrementar nuestro conocimiento sobre la biodiversidad del refugio, información que será esencial para el adecuado manejo del área.


2006 ◽  
Vol 84 (3) ◽  
pp. 365-373 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roman Biek ◽  
Toni K Ruth ◽  
Kerry M Murphy ◽  
Charles R Anderson, Jr. ◽  
Mary Poss

Many animal populations carry endemic (i.e., permanently present) viruses but few studies have assessed the demographic consequences of these infections under natural conditions. We examined the effects of chronic infection with FIVPco, a feline retrovirus, on the fitness and pathogen susceptibility of its natural host, the cougar (Puma concolor (L., 1771)), in the wild. Based on data obtained through intensive monitoring of 160 cougars from two populations, we estimated survival and different measures of host fecundity of infected and uninfected individuals. In addition, we used serological data collected from 207 cougars to test whether FIVPcopredisposes individuals to a higher probability of infection with other pathogens. We found no evidence for an overall reduction in survival due to FIVPcowhen accounting for other sources of demographic variation (age, sex, and population). There was a consistent but nonsignificant trend towards poorer reproductive performance in FIVPco-infected females. We found no serological evidence for a higher probability of secondary infections associated with FIVPco. Overall, these results support the premise that chronic FIVPcoinfection is asymptomatic in its natural cougar host, probably because of a long evolutionary association between virus and host. However, results of stochastic simulations indicate that only larger reductions in annual survival (>20%) can be excluded with confidence. Also, the possibility of a so far unrecognized cost of FIVPcoinfection on cougar fecundity remains.


1943 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 74-88 ◽  
Author(s):  
Doris Stone

The Cordillera de Talamanca, the principal mountain range in southeastern Costa Rica, is a rugged chain which overlies, in part at least, an earlier volcanic mass, and is directly connected with the Chiriqui range of western Panama. The Pacific Ocean is, as the crow flies, a comparatively short distance from the Talamancan peaks. From the Rio Savegre in the southwest to the Rio Chiriqui Viejo in Panama runs a smaller parallel chain, known as the Pacific coastal range.


2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristin Cook ◽  
Alan Brown ◽  
Genny Ballard

Abstract Though work in the area of photovoice (in which students take photos to structure a dialogue that can serve to advance social action as the community responds to the participants’ perspectives and locates them in solution-generation) has been conducted in science education research to focus on learner’s experiences, little has been done to showcase community members’ perspectives resulting from the photovoice experience—though it is here that photovoice holds the most potential to effect positive change locally. The research presented here, conducted during a study abroad course taught in Costa Rica, seeks to understand the ways in which the experience of photovoice stimulated an understanding of and connection to local sustainability issues and to those for whom these issues are most pressing. The study involves a cross-cultural and cross-linguistic exchange of ideas regarding sustainable crop development between study abroad students and community members in a rural mountain town in Costa Rica. Results indicated that the experience of photovoice broadened and enriched all participants’ understanding of environmental sustainability—university students and local residents—as well as inspired critique of socio-scientific issues of personal relevance and impact. Photovoice is thus presented as a rich and engaging instructional technique that also serves as a community participation tool with potential for connecting students and communities from distinct cultures and languages.


2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (3) ◽  
pp. 61
Author(s):  
Jaime Deza ◽  
Víctor Castañeda ◽  
Luciana Rodríguez ◽  
Raúl Yenque

El presente forma parte del proyecto general: Restos culturales y naturales de cambios ambientales en los desiertos de la costa peruana, como indicadores para una normatividad de gestión territorial (resolución rectoral 21946 – 19 – UAP con fecha 22 de marzo de 2019) que se viene desarrollando en los ríos secos de la costa peruana, para responder a un problema de identificación territorial, luego de observar los frecuentes catástrofes producidas por avenidas de agua en períodos de lluvias intensas.¿La costa peruana siempre ha presentado sus características, como un desierto cortado por 53 ríos valles como se observa en la actualidad? De ahí nuestro objetivo general de identificar restos culturales y naturales asociados a las ocupaciones de poblaciones, como indicadores de una cronología de los cambios climáticos ocurridos desde hace doce mil años.Se concluye que el valle fósil de Cupisnique presenta evidencias de la ocupación humana de hace diez mil años, con el camino de bandas que, en las márgenes de los 45 kilómetros de recorrido del río, aprovecharon los bosque y paleofauna hoy extinguida, a excepción del venado (Odocoileus virginianus), sajino (Pecari tajacu), osos de anteojos (Tremarctos ornatus) y pumas (Puma concolor) que en temporadas de lluvias bajan por la vera actual hasta cerca del litoral, como también lo hacen algunos asnos (Equus asinus) salvajes.No se registra ocupaciones durante los siguientes seis mil años, hasta hace cuatro mil años (cronología tentativa) a decir por un edificio precerámico. No se registran restos de la cultura Cupisnique (Formativo Andino 3000 años a.p.), que toma su nombre justamente de este valle fósil con el supuesto que aquí fue un escenario importante para el desarrollo de estas etnias. Luego, hay evidencias de hace mil años con la presencia muy escasa de restos de cerámica del horizonte medio (siglo X), y una creciente ocupación actual de agricultores migrantes que, aprovechando la humedad del manto freático siembran con sistemas de riego por goteo moderno con grandes inversiones.


Check List ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 1190 ◽  
Author(s):  
André L. M. Botelho ◽  
Armando M. Calouro ◽  
Luiz H. M. Borges ◽  
Willandia A. Chaves

Large and medium-sized mammals are essential to forest ecosystems as they are responsible for prey population control, seed dispersal and predation. A mammal survey was conducted in the Humaitá Forest Reserve (HFR), a 20 km² forest fragment located in the southeastern part of the state. The survey was carried out using census transects, camera traps, and occasional records such as bones and footprints. In all, 27 species of large to medium-sized mammals were recorded for the RFH, representing 48% of those expected for the region. Dasyprocta fuliginosa, Pecari tajacu and Didelphis marsupialis were the species with the highest number of records with camera traps. The occurrence of two species of cats (Leopardus pardalis and Puma concolor) and three endangered species (Callimico goeldii, Myrmecophaga tridactyla and Priodontes maximus) are important records for the RFH. The results may aid future research on the ecology, biogeography and conservation of mammals in the region.


ZooKeys ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 989 ◽  
pp. 55-72
Author(s):  
Oscar Vásquez-Bolaños ◽  
Fabián Sibaja-Araya ◽  
Meyer Guevara-Mora

The nymph of Cloeodes dantasp. nov. is described from male and female nymphs collected from highland streams in the Caribbean Slope of the Costa Rica Central Volcanic Mountain Range. Adults are unknown. In addition, C. excogitatus and C. redactus are recorded for the first time in the country. Cloeodes dantasp. nov. can be differentiated from all described species by the predominantly brownish coloration on females and a similar coloration on males but with segments VII–IX light yellow and light brown, with no conspicuous marks or patterns; abundant scale-bases throughout most parts of the body; hindwings pads absent; the presence of three spines in the corners of the posterior margin of sternum III, and the posterior margin of tergum III with 28–30 spines on each side of the middle line (spine with a base width up to 0.5× spine length).


2017 ◽  
Vol 65 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Melvin Cartín Nuñez ◽  
Eduardo Carrillo Jiménez

In the West Central Region of Costa Rica, there are plenty of forests under public and private protection; however, they are increasingly exposed to fragmentation. This is the first report about species richness and the relative abundance of large and medium size terrestrial mammals, in Alberto Manuel Brenes Biological Reserve (ReBAMB) and Nectandra Cloud Forest Reserve (RPN). Our camera trap study was undertaken between April and August, 2008. After 1 620 trap-days, 11 species were identified, nine in ReBAMB and six in RPN. The recorded species in both sites were: Cuniculus paca, Dasyprocta punctata, Nasua narica and Pecari tajacu. Felids were only captured in ReBAMB. The peccary (P. tajacu) was the most abundant mammal within the studied area, in contrast with the apparent absence of species such as white-lipped peccary (Tayassu pecari) and jaguar (Panthera onca). The difference in species composition between both sites was probably consequence of habitat fragmentation, which especially affects RPN. Species as white-lipped peccary and jaguar could be affected, directly or indirectly, by poaching. We propose that a good conservation goal for ReBAMB and due to their ecological importance is to have at least a white-lipped peccary’s population for the next ten years.


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