Cannibalism Among Jaguars (Panthera onca)
Transcrição
Cannibalism Among Jaguars (Panthera onca)
Cannibalism Among Jaguars (Panthera onca) Author(s) :Fernando C. C. Azevedo, Ricardo L. Costa, Henrique V. B. Concone, André Pires-da Silva, and Luciano M. Verdade Source: The Southwestern Naturalist, 55(4):597-599. 2010. Published By: Southwestern Association of Naturalists DOI: 10.1894/RTS-10.1 URL: http://www.bioone.org/doi/full/10.1894/RTS-10.1 BioOne (www.bioone.org) is a a nonprofit, online aggregation of core research in the biological, ecological, and environmental sciences. BioOne provides a sustainable online platform for over 170 journals and books published by nonprofit societies, associations, museums, institutions, and presses. Your use of this PDF, the BioOne Web site, and all posted and associated content indicates your acceptance of BioOne’s Terms of Use, available at www.bioone.org/ page/terms_of_use. Usage of BioOne content is strictly limited to personal, educational, and noncommercial use. Commercial inquiries or rights and permissions requests should be directed to the individual publisher as copyright holder. BioOne sees sustainable scholarly publishing as an inherently collaborative enterprise connecting authors, nonprofit publishers, academic institutions, research libraries, and research funders in the common goal of maximizing access to critical research. December 2010 Notes 597 CANNIBALISM AMONG JAGUARS (PANTHERA ONCA) FERNANDO C. C. AZEVEDO,* RICARDO L. COSTA, HENRIQUE V. B. CONCONE, ANDRÉ PIRES-DA SILVA, AND LUCIANO M. VERDADE Instituto Pró-Carnı́voros, Atibaia, SP 12945-010, Brazil, and Departamento de Ciências Naturais, Universidade Federal de São João del Rei, São João del Rei, MG 36301-160, Brazil (FCCA) Projeto Gadonça, Fazenda San Francisco, Miranda, MS 79380-000, Brazil (RLC) Projeto Onça-Pantaneira, Fazenda Real/Filial São Bento, Miranda, MS 79380-000, Brazil (FCCA, HVBC) Department of Biology, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, TX 76019 (APDS) Laboratório de Ecologia Isotópica/USP, Caixa Postal 09, Piracicaba, SP 13418-900, Brazil (LMV) * Correspondent: [email protected] ABSTRACT—This is the first report of cannibalism in a free-ranging population of jaguars (Panthera onca). An encounter among unfamiliar jaguars may have provoked social stress, a behavior reported in other free-ranging carnivores. RESUMEN—Este es el primer reporte de canibalismo en una población de jaguares (Panthera onca) de vida libre. Un encuentro entre jaguares desconocidos pudo haber provocado estrés social, un comportamiento reportado en otros carnı́voros de vida libre. Among most free-ranging carnivores, populations seem to be regulated by social interactions manifested through territoriality and aggression (Lindzey et al., 1994; Pierce et al., 2000; Adams, 2001). Instances of aggression and killing of conspecifics have been reported mostly as cases of interspecific killings (Palomares and Caro, 1999) or infanticide (Agrell et al., 1998; Soares et al., 2006), which significantly contributes to mortality of juveniles (Packer and Pusey, 1984; Balme and Hunter, 2004). Although less common than infanticide, intraspecific aggression resulting in death and consumption of an adult conspecific, i.e., cannibalism, has been reported among large terrestrial carnivores (Hunter and Skinner, 1995; Logan and Sweanor, 2001; Amstrup et al., 2006; Galentine and Swift, 2007). Among adult felids, factors that lead to cannibalism may include defense of cubs (Logan and Sweanor, 2001), defense of prey (Galentine and Swift, 2007), and apparent competition (Hunter and Skinner, 1995). Although much has been reported regarding agonistic behavior within felids, incidents of cannibalism among jaguars (Panthera onca) are rare and, so far, restricted to infanticide (Soares et al., 2006). Here, we document an observation of cannibalism of an adult female jaguar by two adult male jaguars. Our research is part of an ongoing project initiated in 2003 to examine spatial organization, THE SOUTHWESTERN NATURALIST 55(4):597–599 use of food resources, and predation on livestock by jaguars in the southern part of the Pantanal region of the state of Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil (20u059S, 56u369W; Azevedo and Murray, 2007). The Pantanal is a floodplain covering ca. 140,000 km2 of land on the border of Bolivia and Paraguay, and is characterized by an annual regime of flooding and low land relief, with a landscape comprised of wetlands, seasonally inundated grasslands and woodlands, and non-flooding forests. The study site is a 150-km2 cattle ranch and wildlife reserve in the southern region of the state. On 24 November 2007, a jaguar was found ca. 3 days post-mortem in a dense semi-deciduous forest on the western border of the ranch. The carcass was lying on the ground, uncovered, under the shade of a tree and not yet consumed by scavengers. The carcass was a fully grown adult female jaguar, in apparent good nutritional condition (body weight 5 ca. 60 kg) and, based on wear and staining of dentition, ca. 3–4 years old. Necropsy revealed multiple wounds inflicted on the throat and forelegs, deep punctures at the first, second, and third cervical vertebrae and scapulas, and the abdominal cavity was opened. Multiple wounds matched the size and shape of a bite by a large carnivore. The left forequarter, left forepaw, and distal portions of some ribs had been partially consumed. We did not find fractures on the skull or other bones. 598 vol. 55, no. 4 The Southwestern Naturalist We searched for evidence of other jaguars around the carcass. Along an unpaved road 500 m away from the killing site, we found large tracks of jaguars. Based on shape and size, tracks likely belonged to two males. These two males were first observed together at the end of 2006 and remained in the region. It is uncommon for male jaguars to associate for this length of time. In addition to tracks of two male jaguars, we found a scat ca. 550 m from the carcass. Laboratory analysis of the scat indicated presence of hairs, a partially digested toe, and one claw of a jaguar. An adult female jaguar (radiocollared female 03; Azevedo and Murray, 2007) also was in the vicinity where the carcass was found for $2 days prior to the mortality event. She had defended that territory since 2004 and she was observed near the killing site for $2 days prior to occurrence of the death. We did not observe cuts or injuries on female 03. Her possible role in the cannibalism incident is uncertain, as only tracks of males were around the carcass. A potential explanation for the cannibalism we report may be the presence of two male jaguars and the dead female inside the territory of female 03. We speculate that the encounter among these unfamiliar jaguars might have provoked social stress, a behavior reported in other free-ranging carnivores (Robbins and McCreery, 2000; Amstrup et al., 2006). Deprivation of food seems an unlikely cause for the cannibalism, because abundance of prey is adequate to support the population of jaguars in the area (Azevedo and Murray, 2007). Due to scarcity of reports in the literature on cannibalism, reasons for such behavior remain unclear and are based on isolated incidents. The population of jaguars in our study area has been studied since 2003 and its spatial organization was characterized by the presence of distinct territories with a low degree of spatial overlap and exclusive areas inside home ranges. These regions of exclusivity apparently were maintained passively, with little or no active avoidance or overt defense of areas between pairs of jaguars that had overlapping or adjacent home ranges (Azevedo and Murray, 2007). This is the first report of cannibalism in free-ranging jaguars. Behavior of jaguars and the difficulty of observing individual interactions preclude further understanding of the motivation for such behavior. We thank J. Aycrigg and W. Seybold for constructive comments on an early draft of the manuscript. We thank San Francisco Ranch for support and permission to conduct research. We also thank the National Center for the Research and Conservation of Predators/Instituto Chico Mendes de Conservação da Biodiversidade (CENAP/ICMBio) for the support. This work was financed by San Francisco Ranch, Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP), Premier Pet and World Wildlife Fund-Brazil Program Pantanal para Sempre. Institutional support was provided by Instituto Pró-Carnı́voros. LITERATURE CITED ADAMS, E. S. 2001. Approaches to the study of territory size and shape. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 32:277–303. AGRELL, J., J. O. WOLFF, AND H. YLÖNEN. 1998. Counterstrategies to infanticide in mammals: costs and consequences. Oikos 83:507–517. AMSTRUP, S. C., I. STIRLING, T. S. SMITH, C. PERHAM, AND G. W. THIEMANN. 2006. Recent observations of intraspecific predation and cannibalism among polar bears in the southern Beaufort Sea. Polar Biology 29:997–1002. AZEVEDO, F. C. C., AND D. L. MURRAY. 2007. Spatial organization and food habits of jaguars (Panthera onca) in a floodplain forest. Biological Conservation 137:391–402. BALME, G., AND L. T. B. HUNTER. 2004. Mortality in a protected leopard population, Phinda Private Game Reserve, South Africa: a population in decline? Ecological Journal 6:1–6. GALANTINE, S. P., AND P. K. SWIFT. 2007. Instraspecific killing among mountain lions (Puma concolor). Southwestern Naturalist 52:161–164. HUNTER, L. T. B., AND J. D. SKINNER. 1995. A case of cannibalism in cheetahs. African Journal of Ecology 33:169–171. LINDZEY, F. G., V. SICKLE, B. B. ACKERMAN, D. BARNHURST, T. P. HEMKER, AND S. P. LAING. 1994. Cougar population dynamics in southern Utah. Journal of Wildlife Management 58:619–624. LOGAN, K. A., AND L. L. SWEANOR. 2001. Desert puma: evolutionary ecology and conservation of an enduring carnivore. Island Press, Washington, D.C. PACKER, C., AND A. E. PUSEY. 1984. Infanticide in carnivores. Pages 31–42 in Infanticide: comparative and evolutionary perspectives (G. Hausfater and S. B. Hardy, editors). Aldine Publishing Company, New York. PALOMARES, E., AND M. CARO. 1999. Interspecific killing among mammalian carnivores. American Naturalist 153:492–508. PIERCE, B. M., V. C. BLEICH, AND R. T. BOWYER. 2000. Social organization of mountain lions: does a landtenure system regulate population size? Ecology 91: 1533–1543. December 2010 Notes ROBBINS, R. L., AND E. K. MCCREERY. 2000. Dominant female cannibalism in the African wild dog. African Journal of Ecology 38:91–92. SOARES, T. N., M. P. C. TELLES, L. V. RESENDE, L. SILVEIRA, A. T. JÁCOMO, R. G. MORATO, J. A. F. DINIZ-FILHO, E. EIZIRIK, R. P. V. BRONDANI, AND C. BRONDANI. 2006. Paternity testing and behavioral ecology: a case THE SOUTHWESTERN NATURALIST 55(4):599–600 599 study of jaguars (Panthera onca) in Emas National Park, central Brazil. Genetics and Molecular Biology 29:735–740. Submitted 20 June 2009. Accepted 20 March 2010. Associate Editor was Richard T. Stevens.
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* Corresponding author at: Fish, Wildlife Resources Department,
College of Natural Resources, University of Idaho, Moscow, ID
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