2019
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.13384
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Effectiveness of Panama as an intercontinental land bridge for large mammals

Abstract: Habitat fragmentation is a primary driver of wildlife loss, and establishment of biological corridors is a common strategy to mitigate this problem. A flagship example is the Mesoamerican Biological Corridor (MBC), which aims to connect protected forest areas between Mexico and Panama to allow dispersal and gene flow of forest organisms. Because forests across Central America have continued to degrade, the functioning of the MBC has been questioned, but reliable estimates of species occurrence were unavailable… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…We tested the influence of six environmental covariates on the probability of occupancy and movement of the focal species (Table 1). Variables were chosen on the basis of literature and opinion of experts [29]. We used 30 m as the spatial grain size for all variables, and generated raster layers in ArcMap (v.10.3.1 ESRI, California).…”
Section: Environmental Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…We tested the influence of six environmental covariates on the probability of occupancy and movement of the focal species (Table 1). Variables were chosen on the basis of literature and opinion of experts [29]. We used 30 m as the spatial grain size for all variables, and generated raster layers in ArcMap (v.10.3.1 ESRI, California).…”
Section: Environmental Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We estimated the probability of occupancy for each of the nine focal species from detection-non detection data obtained via camera trapping, and by using the multi-species hierarchical occupancy model in a Bayesian framework that was described by [45]. This model estimates speciesspecific parameters as random effects of a community level distribution which is particularly advantageous for rare species such as jaguar, giant anteater, tapir and white-lipped peccary (see [29] for details). The occupancy model took the form:…”
Section: Modeling Habitat Suitability Using Occupancy and Movement Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Thus, in this contribution we make a detailed report about the sighting of a melanistic jaguar in the Darién Province, and notes and illustrations about the event are included. Apparently melanistic jaguars are not common in Panama, although there are some records on both slopes (Figure 1), from sea level to more than 1000 meters (Moreno et al, 2016a(Moreno et al, , 2016bMeyer et al, 2019).…”
Section: Issn-e: 1659-3197mentioning
confidence: 99%