INVESTIGADORES
LUCHERINI Mauro
artículos
Título:
Modelling the ecological niche of an endangered population of Puma concolor: first application of the GNESFA method to an elusive carnivore
Autor/es:
CARUSO N.; GUERISOLI M.; LUENGOS VIDAL E.M.; CASTILLO D.; CASANAVE E.B.; LUCHERINI M.
Revista:
ECOLOGICAL MODELLING
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2015 vol. 297 p. 11 - 19
ISSN:
0304-3800
Resumen:
Throughout central Argentina the distribution of puma (Puma concolor) has substantially contracted and appears to be restricted to relatively pristine areas. We identified factors affecting puma habitat use at a landscape scale to produce a habitat suitability map in a grassland/scrubland ecoregion in central Argentina. Additionally, we examined the advantages of the General Niche-Environment System Factor Analysis (GNESFA) to determine the use of space of this carnivore. To determine presence of the carnivore, we used the following methods of observation: 1) photographs via camera trapping surveys. 2) semi-structured interviews of local people. 3) Direct observation by way of sightings of live animals. 4) Indirect sightings by way of tracks. 5) opportunistically recordings of dead individuals. We use GNESFA to study the factors affecting the use of space by the puma considering environmental, biological, anthropogenic factors, and MADIFA (Mahalanobis Distance Factor Analysis) to create a habitat suitability map. Most suitable locations for puma were away from cropland or urban areas and from roads. Distances to roads and to scrubland patches were the limiting variables that influenced the narrowness of the niche of this felid. Pumas in this region preferred an environment of patchy scrubland which is typically created by selective logging. They did not limit their environmental preferences to closed habitats. This paper reports the first analysis of the factors determining the distribution of pumas in a grassland/shrubland ecoregion in the southernmost part of its distribution. This suggests that pumas may use human-modified habitats and withstand some degree of deforestation and fragmentation. Our results confirm the usefulness of this integral approach to identify the factors affecting the ecological niche of a cryptic, highly-vagile species.