Neotropical mammal responses to megafires in the Brazilian Pantanal

Author:

Bardales Rocío12ORCID,Boron Valeria23ORCID,Passos Viana Diego Francis4ORCID,Sousa Lara L.1ORCID,Dröge Egil15ORCID,Porfirio Grasiela4ORCID,Jaramillo Maricruz2ORCID,Payán Esteban26ORCID,Sillero‐Zubiri Claudio1ORCID,Hyde Matthew27ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Wildlife Conservation Research Unit, Department of Biology The Recanati‐Kaplan Centre, University of Oxford Abingdon UK

2. Panthera Cooperation New York New York USA

3. The Living Planet Centre, World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) UK Woking Surrey UK

4. Instituto Homem Pantaneiro Corumbá Mato Grosso do Sul Brazil

5. Zambian Carnivore Programme Mfuwe Zambia

6. Wildlife Conservation Society New York New York USA

7. Graduate Degree Program in Ecology, Center for Human‐Carnivore Coexistence Colorado State University Fort Collins Colorado USA

Abstract

AbstractThe increasing frequency and severity of human‐caused fires likely have deleterious effects on species distribution and persistence. In 2020, megafires in the Brazilian Pantanal burned 43% of the biome's unburned area and resulted in mass mortality of wildlife. We investigated changes in habitat use or occupancy for an assemblage of eight mammal species in Serra do Amolar, Brazil, following the 2020 fires using a pre‐ and post‐fire camera trap dataset. Additionally, we estimated the density for two naturally marked species, jaguars Panthera onca and ocelots Leopardus pardalis. Of the eight species, six (ocelots, collared peccaries Dicotyles tajacu, giant armadillos Priodontes maximus, Azara's agouti Dasyprocta azarae, red brocket deer Mazama americana, and tapirs Tapirus terrestris) had declining occupancy following fires, and one had stable habitat use (pumas Puma concolor). Giant armadillo experienced the most precipitous decline in occupancy from 0.431 ± 0.171 to 0.077 ± 0.044 after the fires. Jaguars were the only species with increasing habitat use, from 0.393 ± 0.127 to 0.753 ± 0.085. Jaguar density remained stable across years (2.8 ± 1.3, 3.7 ± 1.3, 2.6 ± 0.85/100 km2), while ocelot density increased from 13.9 ± 3.2 to 16.1 ± 5.2/100 km2. However, the low number of both jaguars and ocelots recaptured after the fire period suggests that immigration may have sustained the population. Our results indicate that the megafires will have significant consequences for species occupancy and fitness in fire‐affected areas. The scale of megafires may inhibit successful recolonization, thus wider studies are needed to investigate population trends.

Funder

Panthera

Publisher

Wiley

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