HABITAT SELECTION BY JAGUAR (Panthera onca) IN TORTUGUERO NATIONAL PARK AND ITS BUFFER AREA, COSTA RICA
The following blog post comes from one of GVI's research partners in Costa Rica, Stephanny Arroyo-Arce. Stephanny is a Costa Rican biologist conducting jaguar research in Tortuguero National Park, and has camera traps placed throughout the park to study the jaguar population. We work closely with Stephanny through our valued partnership with Panthera, an international organization working for the protection of wild cats and their ecosystems. As a portion of Stephanny's camera traps are near to our Jalova research station, Stephanny often visits the station to stay with us, and GVI staff and volunteers assist her in getting to her cameras and collecting the latest data. Read on to learn more about Stephanny's research and findings:
Camera traps and recording of indirect signs (e.g. scats, tracks) have been used to evaluate jaguar habitat selection within the study area. In June, after the cameras were checked for the first time, we were pleased to discover the first photo of a felid - an ocelot (Leopardus pardalis) - in the mountain sector of the park. One month later we were thrilled to encounter our first two jaguars (a male and a female) on the straight of the beach which two weeks later were recorded for the first time in one of our camera traps.
Otherwise data thus far shows evidence of 11 prey species including paca (Agouti paca), white-lipped peccary (Tayassu pecari), Central America agouti (Dasyprocta punctata), red brocket deer (Mazama americana), nine-banded armadillo (Dasypus novencinctus) and green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas) among others.
Furthermore, we have built a strategic alliance with Panthera-Costa Rica who has contributed to successful project development and implementation.
We have also built a second alliance with Global Vision International who has lead one of the longest-running jaguar research initiatives in the Tortuguero National Park - conducted over the past six years.
We believe that it will be a great opportunity for knowledge sharing which will help us to have a better understanding of the situation of jaguars in the study area.
Moreover in July we initiated the dissemination activities with the support of Panthera-Costa Rica and Global Vision International. So far we have given three presentations to the communities of Barra de Tortuguero and Parismina, and in September we conducted a workshop for the park rangers about “Non-invasive Methods to Study Jaguars”. The key purpose of these activities was to raise awareness of the research being carried out within the Tortuguero National Park to the key stakeholders. Once we gathered and analyzed all the information we will be able to establish priority areas for conservation within the park and its buffer area, as well as future conservation policies at the local level. It is expected that wildlife managers of the park will use the information generated as a complementary tool to make practical management and conservation actions of the jaguar in the Tortuguero National Park. This project has the support from Liz Claiborne Art Ortenberg Foundation Jaguar Research Grant Program, Rufford Small Grants Foundation, Idea Wild and U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service.
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