Department of Biology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, U.S.A.
Conserv Biol. 2011 Feb;25(1):154-62. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2010.01581.x. Epub 2010 Oct 1.
Most protected areas are too small to sustain populations of wide-ranging mammals; thus, identification and conservation of high-quality habitat for those animals outside parks is often a high priority, particularly for regions where extensive land conversion is occurring. This is the case in the vicinity of Emas National Park, a small protected area in the Brazilian Cerrado. Over the last 40 years the native vegetation surrounding the park has been converted to agriculture, but the region still supports virtually all of the animals native to the area. We determined the effectiveness of scat-detection dogs in detecting presence of five species of mammals threatened with extinction by habitat loss: maned wolf (Chrysocyon brachyurus), puma (Puma concolor), jaguar (Panthera onca), giant anteater (Myrmecophaga tridactyla), and giant armadillo (Priodontes maximus). The probability of scat detection varied among the five species and among survey quadrats of different size, but was consistent across team, season, and year. The probability of occurrence, determined from the presence of scat, in a randomly selected site within the study area ranged from 0.14 for jaguars, which occur primarily in the forested areas of the park, to 0.91 for maned wolves, the most widely distributed species in our study area. Most occurrences of giant armadillos in the park were in open grasslands, but in the agricultural matrix they tended to occur in riparian woodlands. At least one target species occurred in every survey quadrat, and giant armadillos, jaguars, and maned wolves were more likely to be present in quadrats located inside than outside the park. The effort required for detection of scats was highest for the two felids. We were able to detect the presence for each of five wide-ranging species inside and outside the park and to assign occurrence probabilities to specific survey sites. Thus, scat dogs provide an effective survey tool for rare species even when accurate detection likelihoods are required. We believe the way we used scat-detection dogs to determine the presence of species can be applied to the detection of other mammalian species in other ecosystems.
大多数保护区的面积都太小,无法维持广泛分布的哺乳动物的种群数量;因此,识别和保护这些动物在公园外的高质量栖息地通常是当务之急,尤其是在广泛的土地转换正在发生的地区。巴西塞拉多的埃马司国家公园(Emas National Park)就是这种情况。在过去的 40 年里,公园周围的本地植被已经被改造成了农业用地,但该地区仍然支持着该地区几乎所有的本地动物。我们确定了粪便检测犬在检测五种因栖息地丧失而濒临灭绝的哺乳动物的存在方面的有效性:鬃狼(Chrysocyon brachyurus)、美洲狮(Puma concolor)、美洲虎(Panthera onca)、大食蚁兽(Myrmecophaga tridactyla)和巨型犰狳(Priodontes maximus)。粪便检测的概率因物种和不同大小的调查象限而异,但在团队、季节和年份之间是一致的。在研究区域内随机选择的一个地点,根据粪便的存在确定的出现概率,从主要出现在公园森林地区的美洲虎的 0.14 到在我们研究区域内分布最广的鬃狼的 0.91 不等。公园内大多数巨型犰狳出现在开阔的草原上,但在农业基质中,它们往往出现在河岸林地。每个调查象限中都至少有一个目标物种,巨型犰狳、美洲虎和鬃狼出现在公园内象限的可能性大于出现在公园外的象限。检测粪便所需的努力对两种猫科动物来说最高。我们能够在公园内外检测到五种广泛分布的物种的存在,并为特定的调查地点分配出现的概率。因此,粪便检测犬为即使需要准确的检测可能性的稀有物种提供了一种有效的调查工具。我们相信,我们使用粪便检测犬来确定物种存在的方法可以应用于在其他生态系统中检测其他哺乳动物物种。