dc.creatorBerkunsky, Igor
dc.creatorCepeda, Rosana E.
dc.creatorMarinelli, Claudia
dc.creatorSimoy, Verónica
dc.creatorDaniele, Gonzalo
dc.creatorKacoliris, Federico Pablo
dc.creatorDíaz Luque, José A.
dc.creatorGandoy, Facundo Ariel
dc.creatorAramburú, Rosana Mariel
dc.creatorGilardi, James D.
dc.date2016
dc.date2019-03-14T19:15:24Z
dc.identifierhttp://sedici.unlp.edu.ar/handle/10915/73194
dc.identifierissn:1365-3008
dc.descriptionMonitoring of wild populations is central to species conservation and can pose a number of challenges. To identify trends in populations of parrots, monitoring programmes that explicitly take detectability into account are needed. We assessed an occupancy model that explicitly accounted for detectability as a tool for monitoring the large macaws of Bolivia’s Beni savannahs: the blue-throated Ara glaucogularis, blue-and-yellow Ara ararauna and red-andgreen macaws Ara chloropterus. We also evaluated the joint presence of the three macaw species and estimated their abundance in occupied areas. We modelled occupancy and detection for the three macaw species by combining several site and visit covariates and we described their conditional occupancy. Macaws occupied two thirds of the surveyed area and at least two species occurred together in one third of this area. Probability of detection was 0.48–0.86. For each macaw species, occupancy was affected by the abundance of the other two species, the richness of cavity-nesting species, and the distance to the nearest village. We identified key priority areas for the conservation of these macaws. The flexibility of occupancy methods provides an efficient tool for monitoring macaw occupancy at the landscape level, facilitating prediction of the range of macaw species at a large number of sites, with relatively little effort. This technique could be used in other regions in which the monitoring of threatened parrot populations requires innovative approaches.
dc.descriptionFirst published on line: 17 July 2014.
dc.descriptionFacultad de Ciencias Naturales y Museo
dc.formatapplication/pdf
dc.format113-120
dc.languageen
dc.rightshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
dc.subjectCiencias Naturales
dc.subjectAves
dc.subjectAra ararauna, Ara chloropterus, Ara glaucogularis, Bolivia, conservation, macaw, occupancy
dc.titleOccupancy and abundance of large macaws in the Beni savannahs, Bolivia
dc.typeArticulo
dc.typeArticulo


Este ítem pertenece a la siguiente institución