Trail cam
documents unexpected, most northerly sighting of pack-hunting canids
Date: May 23, 2019
Source: University of Massachusetts at Amherst
Wildlife
ecologists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst who are studying
different conservation practices in the forests of Costa Rica recently made a
startling discovery on a wildlife camera trap -- wild bush dogs documented
farther north than ever before and at the highest elevation.
Doctoral
student Carolina Saenz-Bolaños is in Costa Rica comparing land use, management
techniques, their effects on species presence and abundance, and human
attitudes in four different areas in the rugged Talamanca Mountains: a national
park, an adjacent forest reserve, an indigenous territory and nearby
unprotected areas.
She and
her advisor, professor of environmental conservation Todd Fuller at UMass
Amherst, with others, report in an article today in Tropical Conservation
Science the new, repeated sightings of bush dogs (Speothos venaticus) on trailcams well outside the limit of their
previously known range on the Costa Rica-Panama border. The dogs are native to
South America but are considered rare and are very seldom seen even there, the
two ecologists point out.
Fuller
says, "They aren't supposed to be there, but Carolina's work shows they
really are, and they seem to be doing well. Not only is this wild dog rare
wherever it is found, but this mountain range is very remote, with very little
access. They could have been there before and we wouldn't know it. So we're
documenting them with this report."
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