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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/27200
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Title: | Drivers of survival in a small mammal of conservation concern: an assessment using extensive genetic non-invasive sampling in fragmented farmland |
Authors: | Proença-Ferreira, António Ferreira, Clara Leitão, Isabel Sabino-Marques, Helena Barbosa, Soraia Encarnação, Cláudia Alpizar-Jara, Russell Searle, Jeremy Mira, António Beja, Pedro PiTa, Ricardo |
Keywords: | Agricultural intensification Capwire Cormark-Jolly-Seber Mediterranean farmland Microtus cabrerae Road effects |
Issue Date: | 2019 |
Publisher: | Biological Conservation |
Citation: | Proença-Ferreira, A.; Ferreira, C.; Leitão, I.; Paupério, J.; Sabino-Marques, H.; Barbosa, S.; Lambin, X.; Alves, P.C.; Beja, P.; Moreira, F.; Mira, A.; Pita, R. 2019. Drivers of survival in a small mammal of conservation concern: an assessment using extensive genetic non-invasive sampling in fragmented farmland. Biological Conservation, 230:131-140. |
Abstract: | Although important to guide conservation management, detailed demographic studies on rare or elusive species
inhabiting fragmented, human-dominated landscapes are often hampered by the species' low densities, and the
logistic and ethical constraints in obtaining reliable information covering large areas. Genetic non-invasive
sampling (gNIS) provides cost-effective access to demographic information, though its application to small
mammals is still scarce. We used gNIS to infer on the demography of an endemic small mammal, the Cabrera
vole (Microtus cabrerae), occurring as a spatially-structured population in a 462-ha Mediterranean farmland
landscape. We intensively sampled fresh vole feces in four seasons, extracted the DNA, and performed individual
identification based on genotypes built using nine microsatellites. We then estimated population size and individual
survival relative to environmental variables, controlling for heterogeneity in capture probabilities using capture-mark-recapture modelling. Population size increased during the wet season and decreased during the dry season, while survival remained constant across the study period. Individuals captured along road-verges
and around water-bodies survived longer than those captured near agricultural fields. The use of gNIS on a heterogeneous landscape such as our study area allowed us to demonstrate that human land-use activities affect Cabrera vole demographic parameters in Mediterranean farmland, with implications for conservation planning
towards its long-term persistence. Our approach can be widely applied to other elusive small mammals of conservation concern, but for which informative demographic data are still scarce. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/27200 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | MED - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica BIO - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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