Nestedness in a Carnivorous Mammal Assemblage in Forest Fragments of the Araucanía Region, Southern Chile

Habitat fragmentation is one of the main factors threatening biodiversity, especially in regions where natural ecosystems are under anthropogenic pressure, such as the Araucanía region in southern Chile. This study explores the presence of nestedness patterns in the composition of carnivorous mammal...

Повний опис

Збережено в:
Бібліографічні деталі
Дата:2024
Автори: Sanhueza, R., Moya, W., Rau, J. R.
Формат: Стаття
Мова:Англійська
Опубліковано: Publishing House "Akademperiodyka" of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine 2024
Онлайн доступ:https://ojs.akademperiodyka.org.ua/index.php/Zoodiversity/article/view/602
Теги: Додати тег
Немає тегів, Будьте першим, хто поставить тег для цього запису!
Назва журналу:Journal Zoodiversity

Репозитарії

Journal Zoodiversity
_version_ 1856543256227086336
author Sanhueza, R.
Moya, W.
Rau, J. R.
author_facet Sanhueza, R.
Moya, W.
Rau, J. R.
author_sort Sanhueza, R.
baseUrl_str
collection OJS
datestamp_date 2024-12-12T18:58:51Z
description Habitat fragmentation is one of the main factors threatening biodiversity, especially in regions where natural ecosystems are under anthropogenic pressure, such as the Araucanía region in southern Chile. This study explores the presence of nestedness patterns in the composition of carnivorous mammal species in six fragments along the southern part of the Coastal Range in the Araucanía region. Using scent stations and actively searched five species were recorder over a nine-month period: hog-nosed skunk, kodkod, cougar, gray fox, and culpeo fox. The analysis revealed that the nested pattern, with a temperature of 13.661 °C, suggests a risk of local extinction in smaller fragments (less than 14 ha). The hog-nosed skunk was detected in four fragments, including one of the smaller ones (3.1 ha), while the cougar and kodkod were more restricted, being recorded in three and two fragments, respectively. The culpeo fox and gray fox were present in only one or two fragments. These results support the island biogeography theory, highlighting that larger fragments sustain greater species diversity. This study highlights the importance of conserving larger forest fragments to maintain carnivore diversity, as specialized species rely on denser and more connected habitats. It is recommended to prioritize the preservation of continuous forest areas and restore connectivity between fragments to mitigate the negative effects of fragmentation.
first_indexed 2025-07-22T04:04:06Z
format Article
id zoodiv-article-602
institution Journal Zoodiversity
language English
last_indexed 2025-07-22T04:04:06Z
publishDate 2024
publisher Publishing House "Akademperiodyka" of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine
record_format ojs
spelling zoodiv-article-6022024-12-12T18:58:51Z Nestedness in a Carnivorous Mammal Assemblage in Forest Fragments of the Araucanía Region, Southern Chile Sanhueza, R. Moya, W. Rau, J. R. habitat fragmentation carnivore density nestedness Araucanía Forest species composition Habitat fragmentation is one of the main factors threatening biodiversity, especially in regions where natural ecosystems are under anthropogenic pressure, such as the Araucanía region in southern Chile. This study explores the presence of nestedness patterns in the composition of carnivorous mammal species in six fragments along the southern part of the Coastal Range in the Araucanía region. Using scent stations and actively searched five species were recorder over a nine-month period: hog-nosed skunk, kodkod, cougar, gray fox, and culpeo fox. The analysis revealed that the nested pattern, with a temperature of 13.661 °C, suggests a risk of local extinction in smaller fragments (less than 14 ha). The hog-nosed skunk was detected in four fragments, including one of the smaller ones (3.1 ha), while the cougar and kodkod were more restricted, being recorded in three and two fragments, respectively. The culpeo fox and gray fox were present in only one or two fragments. These results support the island biogeography theory, highlighting that larger fragments sustain greater species diversity. This study highlights the importance of conserving larger forest fragments to maintain carnivore diversity, as specialized species rely on denser and more connected habitats. It is recommended to prioritize the preservation of continuous forest areas and restore connectivity between fragments to mitigate the negative effects of fragmentation. Publishing House "Akademperiodyka" of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine 2024-10-16 Article Article application/pdf https://ojs.akademperiodyka.org.ua/index.php/Zoodiversity/article/view/602 10.15407/zoo2024.06.501 Zoodiversity; Vol. 58 No. 6 (2024): Zoodiversity Zoodiversity (Vestnik Zoologii); Том 58 № 6 (2024): Zoodiversity 2707-7268 2707-725X 10.15407/zoo2024.06 en https://ojs.akademperiodyka.org.ua/index.php/Zoodiversity/article/view/602/295 Copyright (c) 2024 R. Sanhueza, W. Moya, J. R. Rau
spellingShingle Sanhueza, R.
Moya, W.
Rau, J. R.
Nestedness in a Carnivorous Mammal Assemblage in Forest Fragments of the Araucanía Region, Southern Chile
title Nestedness in a Carnivorous Mammal Assemblage in Forest Fragments of the Araucanía Region, Southern Chile
title_full Nestedness in a Carnivorous Mammal Assemblage in Forest Fragments of the Araucanía Region, Southern Chile
title_fullStr Nestedness in a Carnivorous Mammal Assemblage in Forest Fragments of the Araucanía Region, Southern Chile
title_full_unstemmed Nestedness in a Carnivorous Mammal Assemblage in Forest Fragments of the Araucanía Region, Southern Chile
title_short Nestedness in a Carnivorous Mammal Assemblage in Forest Fragments of the Araucanía Region, Southern Chile
title_sort nestedness in a carnivorous mammal assemblage in forest fragments of the araucanía region, southern chile
topic_facet habitat fragmentation
carnivore density
nestedness
Araucanía Forest
species composition
url https://ojs.akademperiodyka.org.ua/index.php/Zoodiversity/article/view/602
work_keys_str_mv AT sanhuezar nestednessinacarnivorousmammalassemblageinforestfragmentsofthearaucaniaregionsouthernchile
AT moyaw nestednessinacarnivorousmammalassemblageinforestfragmentsofthearaucaniaregionsouthernchile
AT raujr nestednessinacarnivorousmammalassemblageinforestfragmentsofthearaucaniaregionsouthernchile