New-record of the bush dog speothos venaticus in a human-altered landscape in west Minas Gerais, Brazil

Autores

  • Fernanda Cavalcanti Azevedo Universidade Federal de Viçosa
  • Frederico Gemesio Lemos Universidade Federal de Goiás
  • Alan Nilo Costa Programa de Conservação Mamíferos do Cerrado
  • Daniel Gomes Rocha Doutorado em Ecologia e Conservação de Recursos Naturais / Instituto de Biolog
  • Mozart Caetano de Freitas-Junior Programa de Conservação Mamíferos do Cerrado

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14393/BJ-v32n1a2016-33302

Palavras-chave:

Camera trapping, conservation, fragmentation, Neotropical savanna, threatened species, wild canid

Resumo

The bush dog (Speothos venaticus) is a Neotropical canid with a wide geographic distribution. Although globally listed as Near Threatened, this species was listed as Vulnerable in a recent assessment by the Brazilian government. Few records of this mammal have been reported in the Brazilian Cerrado, and it is considered extinct in several localities as a result of human landscape fragmentation. The record presented here is the first evidence of bush dog presence in West Minas Gerais, Brazil, which augments the species distribution with expected occurrence for this region. The study site was a transitional area between the Cerrado and Atlantic Forest biomes, in the Triângulo Mineiro region, which is a highly fragmented landscape, dominated by cattle ranches with exotic pasture species and scattered natural patches. We only recorded a single bush dog individual in our survey (4,036 camera trap/night), but our sampling success was expected compared with that of other previous mammal surveys using the camera trapping method, in part, because of the species' elusive behavior and low natural densities. This record enhances knowledge of the S. venaticus distribution. Potentially, we confirm the presence of the bug dog in a region that was regarded being environmentally suitable for this species occurrence, but where it has never been reported. Moreover, our result elucidates the potential of the natural remnants to harbor threatened species in highly human-influenced and non-protected landscapes, which is the dominant scenario found in West Minas Gerais, Brasil.

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Biografia do Autor

Alan Nilo Costa, Programa de Conservação Mamíferos do Cerrado

Biologist, Master, Research of Programa de Conservação Mamíferos do Cerrado and Professor of Instituto de Biotecnologia of Universidade Federal de Goiás, Brazil

Daniel Gomes Rocha, Doutorado em Ecologia e Conservação de Recursos Naturais / Instituto de Biolog

Possui graduação em Ciências Biológicas pela Universidade Federal de Uberlândia (UFU, 2004) , mestrado em Ecologia e Conservação de Recursos Naturais pela UFU (2007) e doutorado em Ecologia e Conservação de Recursos Naturais na UFU (2013). Atualmente é pesquisador colaborador no Laboratório Integrado de Zoologia, Ecologia e Botânica no Departamento de Biologia na Universdade Federal de Goiás / Regional de Catalão. Tem experiência na área de Ecologia Geral, Botânica e Zoologia. Atua em pesquisas relacionadas com Ecologia de Insetos, Mirmecologia e Interações Inseto-planta.

Mozart Caetano de Freitas-Junior, Programa de Conservação Mamíferos do Cerrado

Biologist, Research of Programa de Conservação Mamíferos do Cerrado, Brazil

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Publicado

2016-10-06

Como Citar

AZEVEDO, F.C., LEMOS, F.G., COSTA, A.N., ROCHA, D.G. e FREITAS-JUNIOR, M.C. de, 2016. New-record of the bush dog speothos venaticus in a human-altered landscape in west Minas Gerais, Brazil . Bioscience Journal [online], vol. 32, no. 5, pp. 1324–1330. [Accessed6 outubro 2024]. DOI 10.14393/BJ-v32n1a2016-33302. Available from: https://seer.ufu.br/index.php/biosciencejournal/article/view/33302.

Edição

Seção

Ciências Biológicas