Non-invasive assessment of stress hormones, parasites, and diet, using scat of five felid species in Belize, Central America

Many Neotropical felid species, such as jaguars, are threatened with extinction due to habitat fragmentation and/or human persecution. Human activities around protected areas in Belize, Central America, are increasing and so are levels of human-felid conflict. Potential consequences of this conflic...

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Main Author: Mesa Cruz, Jose Bernardo
Other Authors: Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64185
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-641852020-09-29T05:47:42Z Non-invasive assessment of stress hormones, parasites, and diet, using scat of five felid species in Belize, Central America Mesa Cruz, Jose Bernardo Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences Kelly, Marcella J. Hopkins, William A. Brown, Janine L. non-invasive Neotropical felids Belize fecal glucocorticoids diet endoparasites Many Neotropical felid species, such as jaguars, are threatened with extinction due to habitat fragmentation and/or human persecution. Human activities around protected areas in Belize, Central America, are increasing and so are levels of human-felid conflict. Potential consequences of this conflict are an increase in stress impacting health, diet shifts, or heightening of animal aggression. The goal of this work was to assess the effects of human-modified habitats on native felids by comparing fecal glucocorticoid metabolite (FGM) concentrations, endoparasite species richness (ESR), and diet using non-invasive scat sampling in a protected forest vs. surrounding non-protected areas in Belize. Field studies relying on non-invasive fecal hormone monitoring are subject to potential hormone degradation in samples exposed to the environment. Therefore I conducted immunoassay and environmental validations for measuring FGM in jaguars (Panthera onca). In the field, I collected scat using a detector dog, identified samples using DNA, retrieved parasite propagules with a flotation technique, and identified prey remains by morphology. I detected five felids: jaguar, puma, ocelot, jaguarundi and domestic cat. FGM concentrations were higher in pumas and jaguarundis than in the other felids. I found no livestock remains in felid scats. ESR was similar across felid species. Domestic cats were found only in human-modified areas. This results provide a baseline on adrenal activity, prey consumption, and endoparasites in felids of Belize. These findings could be used for comparisons to populations thought to be affected by human activities across Belize and in neighboring countries. Master of Science 2015-11-25T07:00:16Z 2015-11-25T07:00:16Z 2014-06-02 Thesis vt_gsexam:2842 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64185 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic non-invasive
Neotropical felids
Belize
fecal glucocorticoids
diet
endoparasites
spellingShingle non-invasive
Neotropical felids
Belize
fecal glucocorticoids
diet
endoparasites
Mesa Cruz, Jose Bernardo
Non-invasive assessment of stress hormones, parasites, and diet, using scat of five felid species in Belize, Central America
description Many Neotropical felid species, such as jaguars, are threatened with extinction due to habitat fragmentation and/or human persecution. Human activities around protected areas in Belize, Central America, are increasing and so are levels of human-felid conflict. Potential consequences of this conflict are an increase in stress impacting health, diet shifts, or heightening of animal aggression. The goal of this work was to assess the effects of human-modified habitats on native felids by comparing fecal glucocorticoid metabolite (FGM) concentrations, endoparasite species richness (ESR), and diet using non-invasive scat sampling in a protected forest vs. surrounding non-protected areas in Belize. Field studies relying on non-invasive fecal hormone monitoring are subject to potential hormone degradation in samples exposed to the environment. Therefore I conducted immunoassay and environmental validations for measuring FGM in jaguars (Panthera onca). In the field, I collected scat using a detector dog, identified samples using DNA, retrieved parasite propagules with a flotation technique, and identified prey remains by morphology. I detected five felids: jaguar, puma, ocelot, jaguarundi and domestic cat. FGM concentrations were higher in pumas and jaguarundis than in the other felids. I found no livestock remains in felid scats. ESR was similar across felid species. Domestic cats were found only in human-modified areas. This results provide a baseline on adrenal activity, prey consumption, and endoparasites in felids of Belize. These findings could be used for comparisons to populations thought to be affected by human activities across Belize and in neighboring countries. === Master of Science
author2 Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences
author_facet Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences
Mesa Cruz, Jose Bernardo
author Mesa Cruz, Jose Bernardo
author_sort Mesa Cruz, Jose Bernardo
title Non-invasive assessment of stress hormones, parasites, and diet, using scat of five felid species in Belize, Central America
title_short Non-invasive assessment of stress hormones, parasites, and diet, using scat of five felid species in Belize, Central America
title_full Non-invasive assessment of stress hormones, parasites, and diet, using scat of five felid species in Belize, Central America
title_fullStr Non-invasive assessment of stress hormones, parasites, and diet, using scat of five felid species in Belize, Central America
title_full_unstemmed Non-invasive assessment of stress hormones, parasites, and diet, using scat of five felid species in Belize, Central America
title_sort non-invasive assessment of stress hormones, parasites, and diet, using scat of five felid species in belize, central america
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/64185
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