In the Tapajos-Xingu interfluve, one of the largest birds of prey, the Harpy Eagle, is under intense anthropogenic pressure due to historical and recent reductions in forest cover. We studied prey ...availability and use by Harpy Eagle on six breeding territories on the low- and mid-Xingu River, between 2013 and 2015. We evaluated food resource availability using the environmental-surveys database from two methods: terrestrial surveys (RAPELD method) and fauna rescue/flushing before vegetation suppression for the Belo Monte Hydroelectric Complex construction. Harpy Eagle diet was identified by prey remains sampled around six nest trees. Eighteen species of mammals, birds and reptiles comprised the prey items. Most prey species were sloths, primates and porcupines, which have arboreal habits and are found in forested areas, but two species, hoatzin and iguana, are usually associated with riverine habitats. The proportion of prey from each species predated on the nest best studied was different from estimated availability (χ2 = 54.23; df = 16; p < 0.001), however there was a positive correlation (rs = 0.7; p < 0.01) between prey species consumed and abundance available, where the predation was more on species more abundant. Continuous monitoring of the Harpy Eagle diet at these nests could evidence changes in the assemblage of prey species available for Harpy Eagles, due to changes in the seasonal flood pulse of the Xingu River to be caused by the operation of the hydroelectric dam, and changes in habitat features by forest reduction around breeding territories. We believe that it is important to consider the protection of remnants of forested areas in the landscape matrix surrounding the breeding territories to maintain the food resource availability and allow all pairs to successfully reproduce.
In the Brazilian Amazon, two monospecific genera, the Harpy Eagle and Crested Eagle have low densities and are classified by IUCN as Near Threatened due to habitat loss, deforestation, habitat ...degradation and hunting. In this study, we evaluate occurrence of these large raptors using the environmental surveys database from Belo Monte Hydroelectric Power Plant. Integrating the dataset from two methods, we plotted a distribution map along the Xingu River, including records over a 276-km stretch of river. Terrestrial surveys (RAPELD method) were more efficient for detecting large raptors than standardized aquatic surveys, although the latter were complementary in areas without modules. About 53% of the records were obtained during activities of wildlife rescue/flushing, vegetation suppression or in transit. Between 2012 and 2014, four Harpy Eagles were removed from the wild; two shooting victims, one injured by collision with power lines and one hit by a vehicle. Also, seven nests were mapped. The mean distance between Harpy Eagle records was 15 km along the river channel, with a mean of 20 km between nests near the channel, which allowed us to estimate 20 possible pairs using the alluvial forest, riverine forest and forest fragments. Territories of another ten pairs will probably be affected by inundation of the Volta Grande channel, which is far from the main river. The average distance between Crested Eagle records was 16 km along the river channel. The only nest found was 1.3 km away from a Harpy Eagle nest. The remnant forests are under threat of being replaced by cattle pastures, so we recommend that permanently protected riparian vegetation borders (APP) be guaranteed, and that forest fragments within 5 km of the river be conserved to maintain eagle populations.
Post-hatching parental care is common in crocodilians, but the little information available for Cuvier's dwarf caiman (Paleosuchus palpebrosus) indicates that they show little post-hatching parental ...care. During surveys undertaken between 2005 and 2011, we counted and captured groups of hatchlings and observed the presence or absence of attending adults in streams around the Pantanal, along the Guaporé-Madeira River and flooded forest in central Amazonia, Brazil. We found 37 groups of hatchlings, of which 29 were accompanied by adults. We captured 13 of these adults and all were females. The groups of hatchlings remained with adults for up to 21 months. We monitored females and hatchlings in streams around the Pantanal using captures and with radiotelemetry and showed that females and hatchlings frequently remained together in burrows, especially during the dry season.
A community of small mammals was studied in seasonal semideciduous submontane forest in the state of Mato Grosso, Brazil. This study evaluated the use of edge and matrix pasture, by different small ...mammal species. Overall, 31 areas were studied, with a total sampling effort of 33,800 trap x nights. Only seven of the 25 species captured in the study sites were able to use the pasture matrix; we classified these species as generalists. Fourteen species were found to be intermediate in habits, being able to use forest edges. We found only four species habitat specialists, occurring only on transect lines in the interior of the fragment, at least 150 m from the edge. Transects located in the pasture matrix and 50 m from the edge had significantly lower species richness and abundance than transects located in the fragment edge or in the interior of the fragment. All transects located within the fragment had similar species richness and abundance, but transects located 50 m from the edge had slightly lower, but non-significant, species richness than transects located 100 m apart from edges. Rarefaction curves demonstrated that only medium-sized fragments (100-300 ha) reached an asymptote of species accumulation. The other areas require further sampling, or more sampling transect, before species accumulation curves stabilize, due to a continued increase in species number.
The effects of fire on the composition of a bird community were investigated in an Amazonian savanna near Alter-do-Chão, Pará (Brazil). Mist-net captures and visual counts were used to assess species ...richness and bird abundance pre- and post-fire in an approximately 20 ha area. Visual counts along transects were used to survey birds in an approximately 2000 ha area in a nearby area. Results using the same method of ordination analysis (multidimensional scaling) showed significant effects of fire in the 20 ha and 2000 ha areas and strongly suggest direct effects on bird community composition. However, the effects were different at different spatial scales and/or in different years, indicating that the effects of fire vary spatially and/or temporally. Bird community composition pre-fire was significantly different from that found post-fire. Using multiple regression analysis it was found that the numbers of burned and unburned trees were not significantly related to either bird species richness or bird abundance. Two months after the fire, neither bird species richness nor bird abundance was significantly related to the number of flowering trees (Lafoensia pacari) or fruiting trees (Byrsonima crassifolia). Since fire is an annual event in Alter-do-Chão and is becoming frequent in the entire Amazon, bird community composition in affected areas could be constantly changing in time and space.
Riparian habitats are important for the maintenance of regional biodiversity. Many studies have compared bird distributions between riparian and non-riparian habitats but have not established how ...wide riparian habitats used by birds are, as measured by distance from the nearest stream. We investigated the distribution of understory birds along gradients of distance from streams, soil clay content, and slope in a central Amazonian forest, by mist-netting birds three times in 45 plots. We used nonmetric multidimensional scaling (NMDS) to reduce the dimensionality of species quantitative (abundance) and qualitative (presence-absence) composition to one multivariate axis. Estimates of the width of riparian habitats as indicated by understory birds depended on the community attribute considered, measuring 90 m for species quantitative composition and 140 m for species qualitative composition. Species distributions were correlated with clay content but were independent of slope, while distance from streams was positively correlated with clay content but independent of slope. Clay content affects plant species composition, which in turn, may influence bird species composition. However, distribution patterns of birds in relation to distance from streams are consistent among studies carried out in many different temperate and tropical regions, indicating an effect of distance from streams itself. Protection of riparian habitats is one of the most widely used conservation strategies, and Brazilian environmental legislation mandates the protection of a 30 m wide strip of riparian vegetation on either side of small streams. We show that the protected strip should be much wider and recommend strategies to place other forms of land protection contiguous with riparian areas so that Brazilian environmental legislation better fulfills its role of protecting biodiversity associated with riparian habitats.
We investigated the variation of stable (δ13C) soil carbon isotopes in relation to depth in seven of the most important savanna areas to adjacent contiguous forests in the Amazon region. The δ13C of ...bulk organic matter in all profiles from forested sites increased with soil depth. In forest profiles from$Amap\acute{a}$, Alter do$Ch\tilde{a}o$, and Roraima, the enrichment was less than$3.5\textperthousand$between deeper soil and surface layers, suggesting that C3plants have remained the dominant vegetation cover. On the other hand, in forest soil profiles from$Humait\acute{a}$and Carolina sites, the δ13C enrichment was greater than$3.5\textperthousand$, indicating the influence of past C4vegetation or a mixture of C3/C4vegetation (woody savanna). The surface δ13C values in the savanna profiles were$5-13\textperthousand$greater than the comparable forest profiles, indicating the influence of C4vegetation. Two kinds of isotopic distribution were observed in deeper layers. The savanna profiles at Alter do Chao, Chapada dos Parecis, and$Reden\c{c}\tilde{a}o$had relatively constant δ13C values throughout the profile, suggesting minor past changes in the vegetation composition. In profiles at$Amap\acute{a}$, Roraima,$Humait\acute{a}$, and Carolina, δ13C values decreased with depth from the surface and converged with comparable forest values, suggesting more woody savanna in the past than exists currently.
Seasonal occurrence, breeding and migration records are presented for about 150 species of birds, monitored during a four years survey in an Amazonian savanna near Alter do Chão, Pará state, Brazil, ...by means of mist netting and observations along transects and on random walks. About half of the recorded species were Passeriformes. The local avifauna was mostly comprised of residents, with major breeding activities during the dry season, August through February. Thirteen non-resident species were classified as migrants which is considered a rather small fraction. Calculations of the total number of species expected to occur at the study site are presented. The composition of this savanna bird community is discussed under aspects of seasonality and migrational activity. The data are compared with records from other cerrado habitats in Amazonia and elsewhere, especially in Central Brazil. Resumo Registros de ocorrência sazonal, reprodução e migração são apresentados para cerca de 150 espécies de aves, monitoradas durante quatro anos de levantamentos em uma savana Amazônica perto de Alter do Chão, Estado do Pará, Brasil, através de redes ornitológicas, observações ao longo de transectos e caminhadas ao acaso. Perto da metade das espécies registradas foram passeriformes. A avifauna local foi constituída principalmente de espécies residentes, com o pico de atividades reprodutivas durante a estação seca, ou seja 80% das espécies reproduzindo de Agosto até Fevereiro. Este padrão se repetiu em 1988 e 1989. Juvenis foram capturados durante todo o ano com picos durante a estação chuvosa. Treze espécies não residentes foram consideradas migrantes os quais são uma pequena fração da comunidade. Estimativas do número total esperado de espécies ocorrendo na área de estudo são apresentados. As capturas com redes ornitológicas em 4 ha resultaram em 41 espécies e para 13 ha, 64 espécies. Quando a área amostrada foi duplicada para 24 ha, o número de espécies aumentou em somente 4 e correspondeu à metade do total registrado para a área. O número assintótico estimado para 13 ha foi de 82 espécies o qual foi similar ao número estimado para 24 ha (80 espécies). A composição desta comunidade de aves de savana é discutida sob os aspectos de sasonalidade e atividades migratórias. Os resultados são comparados com registros de outros habitats de cerrado na Amazônia e outros locais especialmente no Brasil central.
We studied the energy flow from C₃ and C₄ plants to higher trophic levels in a central Amazonian savanna by comparing the carbon stable-isotope ratios of potential food plants to the isotope ratios ...of species of different consumer groups. All C₄ plants encountered in our study area were grasses and all C₃ plants were bushes, shrubs or vines. Differences in δ13C ratios among bushes (x̄ = -30.8, SD = 1.2), vines (x̄ = -30.7, SD = 0.46) and trees (x̄ = -29.7, SD = 1.5) were small. However the mean δ13C ratio of dicotyledonous plants (x̄ = -30.4, SD = 1.3) was much more negative than that of the most common grasses (x̄ = -13.4, SD = 0.27). The insect primary consumers had δ13C ratios which ranged from a mean of -29.5 (SD = 0.47) for the grasshopper Tropidacris collaris to a mean of -14.7 (SD = 0.56) for a termite (Nasutitermes sp.), a range similar to that of the vegetation. However, the common insectivorous and omnivorous vertebrates had intermediate values for δ13C, indicating that carbon from different autotrophic sources mixes rapidly as it moves up the food chain. Despite this mixing, the frogs and lizards generally had higher values of δ13C (x̄ = -21.7, SD = 1.6; x̄ = -21.9, SD = 1.8, respectively) than the birds (x̄ = -24.8, SD = 1.8) and the only species of mammal resident in the savanna (x̄ = -25.4), indicating that they are generally more dependent on, or more able to utilise, food chains based on C₄ grasses.
Effects of fragmentation on biodiversity have received much attention in recent decades, as fragmentation can greatly reduce viable areas for living organisms. We studied its effect on Thamnophilus ...stictocephalus (Thamnophilidae), an understory bird, in semideciduous forest fragments in Alter-do-Chão, Santarém, Pará. We tested whether the density of Thamnophilus stictocephalus was a function of fragment size and shape, density of vegetation, or arthropod biomass. Density of Thamnophilus was positively related to fragment size, but not to the other factors analyzed. Arthropod biomass was positively related to fragment size. The density of T. stictocephalus in fragments was significantly higher than it was in continuous forest. Fragmentation processes had a pronounced effect on the relative density of T. stictocephalus.