Title
Game vertebrate densities in hunted and nonhunted forest sites in Manu National Park, Peru
Date Issued
2010
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Endo W.
Peres C.A.
Mori S.
Sanchez-Vega J.L.
Shepard G.H.
Yu D.W.
Publisher(s)
John Wiley & Sons
Abstract
Manu National Park of southern Peru is one of the most renowned protected areas in the world, yet large-bodied vertebrate surveys conducted to date have been restricted to Cocha Cashu Biological Station, a research station covering <0.06 percent of the 1.7 Mha park. Manu Park is occupied by >460 settled Matsigenka Amerindians, 300-400 isolated Matsigenka, and several, little-known groups of isolated hunter-gatherers, yet the impact of these native Amazonians on game vertebrate populations within the park remains poorly understood. On the basis of 1495 km of standardized line-transect censuses, we present density and biomass estimates for 23 mammal, bird, and reptile species for seven lowland and upland forest sites in Manu Park, including Cocha Cashu. We compare these estimates between hunted and nonhunted sites within Manu Park, and with other Neotropical forest sites. Manu Park safeguards some of the most species-rich and highest biomass assemblages of arboreal and terrestrial mammals ever recorded in Neotropical forests, most likely because of its direct Andean influence and high levels of soil fertility. Relative to Barro Colorado Island, seed predators and arboreal folivores in Manu are rare, and generalist frugivores specializing on mature fruit pulp are abundant. The impact of such a qualitative shift in the vertebrate community on the dynamics of plant regeneration, and therefore, on our understanding of tropical plant ecology, must be profound. Despite a number of external threats, Manu Park continues to serve as a baseline against which other Neotropical forests can be gauged. © 2009 The Author(s). Journal compilation © 2009 by The Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation.
Start page
251
End page
261
Volume
42
Issue
2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Zoología, Ornitología, Entomología, ciencias biológicas del comportamiento
Conservación de la Biodiversidad
Forestal
Subjects
Publication version
Version of Record
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-77951196758
Source
Biotropica
ISSN of the container
0006-3606
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus