Helena Aguiar-Silva, T. Sanaiotti, Rogério Martins Sanches, Thiago Bicudo, Carlos Augusto Tuyama, T. Junqueira, A. Albernaz
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
We tracked six Harpy Eagles (Harpia harpyja) by satellite telemetry from 2011 to 2021 in the Brazilian Amazonia, analyzing the used area, movements parameters and habitat selection functions for three of them: one adult within its breeding site, one translocated adult, and a four-years old floating subadult. We used the first-passage time to assess the scale at which these individuals respond to the environment, and the behavioral change point analysis to determine behavioral states parameters across trajectories. We fitted a logistic linear regression model with used-available locations and environmental covariates: slope, Terrain Ruggedness Index (TRI), Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), land cover, and habitat edge as predictor variables. Harpy Eagle locations were highly related with “Forest” land cover and high NDVI values. The subadult and the translocated adult selected for “Secondary Forest” within their home ranges, which highlights the importance of this type of habitat in fragmented landscapes. In addition, we found behavioural differences in the movement paths of rehabilitated individuals of Harpy Eagle that are subsequently released to the wild. In conclusion, we suggest including in conservation management not only the nest tree and its immediately surrounding but also an area over landscape scale to optimize and promote the functional connectivity, with a safe and efficient dispersion of immatures. Linking Harpy Eagle´s movement locations to resources (land cover, NDVI), risks (forested habitat edge) and environmental conditions (slope, terrain ruggedness) is an opportunity to learn about habitat selection by this large canopy predator. The Harpy Eagle movement ecology has a potential relationship with the spatial dynamics of prey in the forest canopy, which needs to be further addressed in future research.
期刊介绍:
ECOSISTEMAS es la revista científica de ecología y medio ambiente de la Asociación Española de Ecología Terrestre. Desde el año 2001 se publica exclusivamente en formato electrónico cada cuatro meses. La revista publica artículos científicos originales sobre ecología y medio ambiente incluyendo investigación sobre organismos, poblaciones, comunidades y ecosistemas, interacciones biológicas, paleoecología, ecofisiología, eco-evolución y procesos ecosistémicos, así como sobre perturbaciones antropogénicas y sus efectos a nivel ecológico y ambiental. Todas las contribuciones deben ser originales y no haber sido publicadas previamente en la literatura científica. Serán considerados para su publicación solamente trabajos de índole científica que presenten datos nuevos analizados de forma adecuada o trabajos novedosos de revisión bibliográfica que constituyan una aportación importante al tema. Los trabajos descriptivos sin una interpretación y discusión detallada del significado ecológico que puede extraerse de los resultados escritos, los que reflejen una opinión personal, o que sean puramente especulativos sin resultados claros que apoyen las conclusiones descritas, serán rechazados a nivel editorial. Todas las contribuciones son publicadas en castellano, con título, resumen y pies de figuras y tablas también en inglés. Nuestro objetivo es ser la revista científica de ecología y medio ambiente de referencia para los países y comunidades hispanohablantes. No se repercute tasa o coste alguno a los autores en concepto de gestión o publicación de sus propuestas.