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. 2017 Nov;98(11):2979.
doi: 10.1002/ecy.1998.

ATLANTIC-CAMTRAPS: a dataset of medium and large terrestrial mammal communities in the Atlantic Forest of South America

Fernando Lima  1   2 Gabrielle Beca  1 Renata L Muylaert  1 Clinton N Jenkins  2 Miriam L L Perilli  3 Ana Maria O Paschoal  4 Rodrigo L Massara  4 Adriano P Paglia  4 Adriano G Chiarello  5 Maurício E Graipel  6 Jorge J Cherem  7 André L Regolin  1 Luiz Gustavo R Oliveira Santos  8 Carlos R Brocardo  1   9 Agustín Paviolo  10   11 Mario S Di Bitetti  10   11   12 Leandro M Scoss  13 Fabiana L Rocha  14 Roberto Fusco-Costa  15   16 Clarissa A Rosa  17 Marina X Da Silva  18 Ludmila Hufnagell  4 Paloma M Santos  4 Gabriela T Duarte  4 Luiza N Guimarães  4 Larissa L Bailey  19 Flávio Henrique G Rodrigues  4 Heitor M Cunha  20 Felipe M Fantacini  21 Graziele O Batista  22 Juliano A Bogoni  23 Marco A Tortato  24 Micheli R Luiz  25 Nivaldo Peroni  6 Pedro V De Castilho  26 Thiago B Maccarini  27 Vilmar Picinatto Filho  28 Carlos De Angelo  10   11 Paula Cruz  10   11 Verónica Quiroga  10   11 María E Iezzi  10   11 Diego Varela  10   11 Sandra M C Cavalcanti  3 Alexandre C Martensen  29 Erica V Maggiorini  30 Fabíola F Keesen  31 André V Nunes  24 Gisele M Lessa  32 Pedro Cordeiro-Estrela  33 Mayara G Beltrão  33   34 Anna Carolina F De Albuquerque  33   34 Bianca Ingberman  15 Camila R Cassano  35 Laury Cullen Junior  2 Milton C Ribeiro  1 Mauro Galetti  1
Affiliations

ATLANTIC-CAMTRAPS: a dataset of medium and large terrestrial mammal communities in the Atlantic Forest of South America

Fernando Lima et al. Ecology. 2017 Nov.

Abstract

Our understanding of mammal ecology has always been hindered by the difficulties of observing species in closed tropical forests. Camera trapping has become a major advance for monitoring terrestrial mammals in biodiversity rich ecosystems. Here we compiled one of the largest datasets of inventories of terrestrial mammal communities for the Neotropical region based on camera trapping studies. The dataset comprises 170 surveys of medium to large terrestrial mammals using camera traps conducted in 144 areas by 74 studies, covering six vegetation types of tropical and subtropical Atlantic Forest of South America (Brazil and Argentina), and present data on species composition and richness. The complete dataset comprises 53,438 independent records of 83 species of mammals, includes 10 species of marsupials, 15 rodents, 20 carnivores, eight ungulates and six armadillos. Species richness averaged 13 species (±6.07 SD) per site. Only six species occurred in more than 50% of the sites: the domestic dog Canis familiaris, crab-eating fox Cerdocyon thous, tayra Eira barbara, south American coati Nasua nasua, crab-eating raccoon Procyon cancrivorus and the nine-banded armadillo Dasypus novemcinctus. The information contained in this dataset can be used to understand macroecological patterns of biodiversity, community, and population structure, but also to evaluate the ecological consequences of fragmentation, defaunation, and trophic interactions.

Keywords: Atlantic Forest; biodiversity hotspot; camera traps; forest fragmentation; invasive species; mammal communities; neotropical mammals.

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