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Combining species distribution modeling and field surveys to reappraise the geographic distribution and conservation status of the threatened thin-spined porcupine (Chaetomys subspinosus)
Author(s) -
Gastón Andrés Fernandez Giné,
Deborah Faria
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0207914
Subject(s) - threatened species , deforestation (computer science) , habitat , geography , ecology , habitat destruction , environmental niche modelling , conservation status , species distribution , distribution (mathematics) , forest management , forestry , biology , ecological niche , mathematical analysis , mathematics , computer science , programming language
The threatened thin-spined porcupine ( Chaetomys subspinosus ), a forest-specialist endemic to the Brazilian Atlantic forest, was rarely detected in the wild during the 20 th century. Previous geographic distribution assessments were carried out nearly three decades ago and were based on interview data. We performed extensive field surveys (based on active search and interviews), a literature review, and species distribution modeling to predict and validate a more reliable picture of its geographic distribution and environmental suitability gradient. We identified the main predictors of species’ incidence, its conservation status, and pinpointed key areas for species conservation. Our results indicated that C . subspinosus is distributed continuously in the Atlantic forest from southeastern Espirito Santo to central-eastern Sergipe state, totaling 104,326 km 2 of occurrence area, although only 3,299 km 2 (13.3%) is currently represented by native forests (species habitat). C . subspinosus was absent or at least so rare that it was not detected in more than half of the locations sampled by interviews (53.5%). Our results suggest that populations are sensitive to climatic conditions and habitat loss, becoming abruptly rarer when the remaining forest cover reaches less than 10% area within a region (~ 5,000 km 2 scale). This result indicates that the high deforestation level of the Atlantic forest is already close to the limit of regional species resistance. Bahia state still harbors the bulk of the remaining forest with high climatic suitability, and generally under low levels of legal protection. Herein we highlight priority areas and research gaps that could guide decision makers to promote conservation strategies for this threatened species.

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