Regionally extinct species rediscovered: the bush dog Speothos venaticus in Minas Gerais, south-eastern Brazil

Bosque Modelo:

Mosaico

Temática:

Conservación

Tipo de documento:

Artículo científico

Resumen

The bush dog Speothos venaticus, a rare Near Threatened South American canid that lives in packs, was thought to be extinct in Minas Gerais state, south-eastern Brazil, until recently. Here, we report four recent records of the species in Minas Gerais, the first in the state since the description of the species in 1842. All records are from the Cerrado ecosystem in the north and north-west of the state; two are from animals found dead, one from footprints and another from a camera trap. Three of the records were inside or close (, 10 km) to strict protected areas, in a region recognized as the Protected Areas Mosaic Sertão Veredas– Peruaçu, where we expect any new records of the bush dog to be found. We discuss the low probability of detecting the bush dog and the main regional threats to the species, and emphasize the need to protect large and interconnected natural areas and keep them free of domestic dogs to avoid the extinction of the bush dog in Minas Gerais.

Información Bibliográfica

Autor:

Guilherme Braga Ferreira, Marcelo Juliano Rabelo Oliveira, Rogério Cunha de Paula ,Flávio Henrique Guimarães Rodrigues, Érica Daniele Cunha Carmo

Revista:

Oryx

Año:

2015

N°:

1

País :

Brasil

Páginas:

60 - 63

Volumen:

49

Idioma:

Ingles

Palabras claves

Brazil, bush dog, Cerrado, Minas Gerais, regional extinction, Speothos venaticus