Open Access
How to translate text using browser tools
15 December 2014 Short-term success in the reintroduction of the red-humped agouti Dasyprocta leporina, an important seed disperser, in a Brazilian Atlantic Forest reserve
Bruno Cid, Luiza Figueira, Ana Flora de T. e Mello, Alexandra S. Pires, Fernando A. S. Fernandez
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Reintroduction is an increasingly important tool to restore local extinctions and ecological interactions. Evaluating the success of reintroduction projects allows conservationists to learn from previous experience. Here we report on the reintroduction of agoutis, Dasyprocta leporina, to a Brazilian Atlantic Forest reserve in order to (1) determine the short-term status of the reintroduction; (2) describe and evaluate the management procedures that contributed to reintroduction success; and (3) identify the fruits and seeds consumed and buried by the agoutis, as an indication of their role in restoring ecological processes. We captured and tagged 21 adult individuals from a semi-captive population and reintroduced four males and seven females. One male died and almost all individuals lost weight (range=0-620 g; n=11) during quarantine (median=133 days; range=67–243 days; n=20). Six males and three females died, but the others gained weight during acclimatization (range=150–260 g; n=5). Individuals abandoned the food supplement up to 87 days after release, establishing home-ranges at least three times larger than in natural populations of agoutis. The estimated annual survival rate was 0.83, and 10 nature-born cubs were observed. The reintroduction was considered successful in the short-term. Among the main recommendations for future reintroductions, we suggest the reduction of quarantine and the maintenance of acclimatization periods, with structural improvements for both. Agoutis were seen eating fruits and seeds of 10 species and burying seeds of three of them. The buried seeds are from zoochoric large-seeded trees, thus enhancing recruitment in a disperser-impoverished forest.

Introduction

The primary goal of reintroduction in conservation is “to re-establish a viable population of the focal species within its indigenous range” [1]. There has also been a growing concern about recovering ecosystem processes through reintroduction [2, 3]. Most reintroduction attempts have failed [4]; unfortunately, many of the failures have not been published, thus published studies are biased towards the successful ones [5]. Therefore, it is important to describe the procedures used in reintroduction projects and to evaluate their success, in order to allow conservationists to learn from previous experience [234, 6].

The first stages of a reintroduction, when the population is still small, are critical and especially prone to failure [2, 7]. Some objective criteria that have been proposed to evaluate the short-term success of a reintroduction are: independence from food supplementation; post-release settlement (evaluated through the establishment of home ranges); high annual survival rates of reintroduced individuals; and occurrence of breeding in nature [8910111213].

Among the procedures proposed to increase the reintroduction success of captive raised animals, is the use of a quarantine period in a zoo or a similar institution, where health examinations are performed [1]. This is important to ensure that animals are healthy and not likely to introduce pathogens to the release site [14]. Another key procedure is soft-release (sensu [15]), where animals are kept in a pen located in the reintroduction site for an acclimatization period before being released. Acclimatization is important to familiarize the animals with local conditions, to allow them to gain weight, and to perform skill training (e.g. [161718192021]). It also allows monitoring of the individuals' adaptation to the tracking equipment (in this study, a modified TXE-311C collar with activity sensor; Telenax®, Playa del Carmen, Mexico; see [16]). After release, food supplementation is usually provided outside the pen, to help animals to survive their first days in nature when their foraging skills may be still inefficient, and to inhibit large displacements to adjacent unsuitable areas [1, 10, 15, 22, 23]. Finally, monitoring allows the researcher to follow the animals, to intervene if needed, and to assess the program's success indicators [24].

Here we report on the reintroduction of a population of red-humped agoutis Dasyprocta leporina to the Tijuca National Park (hence TNP), an Atlantic Forest reserve in Brazil. The species occurs in forested areas up to 2,000 m, usually near watercourses. It is mainly diurnal, with activity peaks in the early morning and late afternoon [25, 26]. Its diet is mainly composed of fruits and seeds with occasional consumption of insects, fiber and leaves [27]. Agoutis are among the most important large-seed dispersers [282930]. These scatter-hoarding rodents hide seeds in widely spaced caches in the soil surface as food reserves to be retrieved and eaten later [31]. The reintroduction of D. leporina is therefore an important tool for restoring animal-plant interactions in Brazilian Atlantic Forest areas where these animals are absent.

Agoutis had not been seen in the area for at least two decades prior to the start of our project in 2010, leading to the assumption that they were locally extinct. The probable causes of extinction were hunting and intense habitat loss and fragmentation from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century due to replacement of forest by sugarcane, coffee plantations, and pastureland (for the history of fragmentation, see [32]). Nowadays, these causes of extinction have been extirpated, but some trophic webs are still impoverished [33] and there has been little recruitment of some large-seeded tree species in TNP [34], emphasizing the need to restore ecological processes in this important reserve.

The objectives of this study were: (1) to evaluate the short-term success of the reintroduction of agoutis; (2) to describe and evaluate the management procedures used to reintroduce the agoutis (quarantine, soft release and food supplementation); and (3) to identify the food items consumed and buried by the agoutis, as an indication of the potential of the reintroduction for restoring ecological processes.

Methods

Study area

TNP is located in the middle of Rio de Janeiro city (22°55′–23°00′ S, 43°11′–43°19′ W); it is considered the world's largest urban forest (3,953 ha) (Fig. 1). The vegetation of TNP is composed of typical Atlantic Rain Forest species plus some exotic trees, especially jackfruit Artocarpus heterophyllus, eucalyptus Eucalyptus spp. and corn-plant Dracaena fragrans. Mean monthly temperatures vary between 18°C and 26°C, and annual precipitation exceeds 1,200 mm, with no marked seasons and no water deficit [35].

Fig. 1.

Tijuca National Park (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil), where the population of agoutis (Dasyprocta leporina) was reintroduced. The white contours determine the Park's limits. The white dots represent the locations of the acclimatization pen (release site) within the study area and of the latter within Brazil (map in the upper-right corner).

10.1177_194008291400700415-fig1.tif

Reintroduction procedures and monitoring

The animals used for reintroduction (21 adult agoutis; 11 males and 10 females) were provided by a semi-captive population. This population inhabits a municipal park in the centre of Rio de Janeiro city (locally known as Campo de Santana), where they were fed daily with a mixture of fruits and vegetables. We trapped the agoutis using Tomahawk® live traps (100×80×80 cm and 81×23×23 cm, Tomahawk Live Trap Co., Tomahawk, WI, U.S.A.), baited with bananas. After capture, we took the animals directly to Rio de Janeiro Zoo, where they were anesthetized (using 20 mg/Kg of ketamine and 2 mg/Kg of xylazine), weighed, sexed, and health screened through blood, faecal and clinical analyses during the quarantine. These analyses showed no pathogens or significant alterations to normal patterns, and all animals were considered healthy. While in the zoo, the agoutis were kept in an enclosure with a concrete floor and fed twice a day with a mixture of fruits and vegetables.

After quarantine, we weighed the agoutis again and equipped them with radiotracking collars. Total collar weight was 23 g (~1% of agouti body weight). We then transported the animals to a pre-release acclimatization pen in TNP, as part of the soft-release process. The pen was a 10×10 m wire mesh fenced cage with two subdivisions, a main part (8×10 m) and an annex (2×10 m) to allow eventual isolation of aggressive individuals. During the acclimatization period, we provided wood shelters and water ad libitum in addition to 500g/day of food per animal (a mixture of fruit and vegetables). We also provided the agoutis with fruits and seeds of plant species that were fruiting in TNP at the time.

On the release day, we weighed the agoutis, took them to the annex, and opened the door to the exterior; the animals then left the pen by themselves. We compared animal weight variations over the reintroduction stages using paired t-tests. It was not possible to weigh all individuals at all stages due to problems with the equipment; the number of weighed animals was provided in each case. After release, we monitored the animals using the “homing-in on the animal” observation technique [36], following the individuals two or three times a week until either the animal died or the batteries on their tracking devices failed. We performed the Moran's spatial autocorrelation index [37] and found that 45 minute intervals were enough to ensure temporal independence among fixes. Thus, consecutive fixes of the same individual were recorded within intervals of at least one hour.

We provided water and food (500 g/day.animal) near the pen every day for 30 days or until the released animals abandoned the food supplements. If an animal did not abandon the food supplement voluntarily, we reduced its amount gradually after the 30 days. We calculated the time each animal took to abandon the supplementary food by counting the days between its release and the last time it was seen feeding on it. This research and the reintroduction procedures adopted have been approved by ICMBio, the appropriate Brazilian environmental agency.

Home-range establishment

The settlement of individuals was evaluated through the establishment of home-ranges. To estimate home-range size we excluded the first fixes of each individual in order to discard the initial exploratory movements. To know from which fix to start the home range estimation, we plotted the cumulative fixed-kernel 95% [38] areas chronologically (hereafter kernel 95%), with ad hoc estimation of the href value. We considered the first large displacement between two asymptotes as the beginning of the estimation, as it represents the departure from the vicinity of the acclimatization pen and from food supplementation, thus indicating the establishment of an independent home-range. To identify the first large displacement, we fitted a linear model to the cumulative kernel 95% estimation spanning eight fix intervals, and started the home-range estimation from the last fix of the first interval whose slope was significantly different from zero. We estimated home-range sizes using kernel 95% and the mean href as smoothing factor (h=63.1). From these contours, we estimated the individual home-range overlaps, pairwise for all possible pairs of individuals who had, at least, 30 fixes each for the same time interval. In order to allow comparisons with other studies on agoutis, we also estimated the home-range sizes using the minimum convex polygon 100% (hereafter MCP 100%).

Population establishment

Population establishment was evaluated using the occurrence of reproduction and individual survival rates. The occurrence of reproduction was detected by the sighting of cubs with the reintroduced females. We estimated the annual survival rate based on the individuals' capture histories, using the known fates models of program MARK [39]. As only two released animals died before the end of the study (a male and a female), we used the simplest model for estimating the survival rate, where survival is equal among all sampling occasions (months) intervals and its estimation is not dependent on any covariates. We used R v.3.0.1 for all other analyses (packages used: adehabitatHR, maptools, rgdal and rgeos) [40].

Food item consumption

From September 2010 to August 2011, we carried out independent focal-days (one individual followed per day) to identify the food items consumed by the agoutis. On those days we used the radio transmitter signal to find an agouti and followed it for four or five hours, using binoculars to identify the items consumed. We recorded results when the individual was seen feeding on an item. A new record was considered if the animal fed on a different item or if the individual was absent for 30 minutes or more and returned to the same food patch. Additionally, we made occasional records of food items eaten or buried by agoutis during the regular monitoring.

Results

Individuals lost weight during quarantine; their mean weight was 2,586.8 g (sd=426.9) on the capture day and 2,302.3 g (sd=404.1) by the end of this period (t10=4.74, p<0.001, n=11; Fig. 2). Additionally, a male agouti died as a consequence of fighting with other agoutis during that period. Because of logistical problems, the quarantine period was variable, with a median of 133 days (range=67–243; n=20; Table 1).

Table 1.

Length of each stage of the reintroduction process and status of individual agoutis (Dasyprocta leporina) captured to be reintroduced in Tijuca National Park (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil). M = males and F = females. Status = individual's status by the end of the study (September 2011).

10.1177_194008291400700415-table1.tif

Fig. 2.

Weight change of agoutis (Dasyprocta leporina) in different reintroduction stages (capture, quarantine and acclimatization). The lines connecting dots represent the measurements taken from the same individual on different occasions; males are in black and females in grey.

10.1177_194008291400700415-fig2.tif

During the acclimatization period nine animals died (Table 1). The identified causes of death were fighting among males (3), fighting among individuals whose sex could not be determined (2), problems with the original model of radiotracking collars (1) [16], hypothermia (1) and death by the attack of two domestic dogs that broke into the acclimatization pen (1), pushing through the lower edge of the wire mesh fence (Table 1).

For the 11 animals that remained in the pen until release, the median acclimatization period was 21 days (range=14–76; Table 1). Animals gained weight in this period (t4=7.46, p=0.002, n=5; Fig. 2). The mean weight at release for these five animals was 2,242 g (sd=355.9). The animals remained near the pen for a median of 17 days after release and always fed on the supplementary food (range=3–87; n=11).

After release, we monitored four males and seven females for 192 non-consecutive days (February 2010 – September 2011). One male and one female agouti died before the end of the study (324 and 160 days after release, respectively). One female removed its collar after 118 days, but we continued to monitor the animal whenever it was seen and its identity could be ascertained unequivocally. We lost track of another female 11 days after release and could not estimate her home-range size.

A total of 1,012 fixes (range=34–128; n=11) were recorded for all agoutis. Following our criterion for establishment, we selected 772 fixes (range=45–108, n=10) for home-range analysis. Using this criterion, we excluded 207 fixes (range=13–38, n=10). Time from release date to the date of the first fix used to estimate the home-ranges ranged from two to 67 days (n=10; Table 2). The distances from release site to the centroid of the fixes used to estimate home-ranges sizes for each individual ranged from 171.5 to 561.3 m (Fig. 3). Minimum and maximum distances from release site ranged from 4.4 to 230.4 m and from 378.7 to 844.1 m, respectively (n=10, Table 2). Home-range sizes estimated for all individuals by kernel 95% ranged from 15 to 38.8 ha (n=10; Fig. 3; Table 2) and mean home-range overlap was 0.46 (sd=0.24; n=55 pairs of individuals). The estimates obtained by MCP 100% ranged from 3.9 to 26.9 ha (n=10; Table 2). Male and female home-ranges sizes did not differ significantly using either the kernel 95% (Wilcoxon=5, p=0.171) or the MCP 100% (Wilconxon=4, p=0.114).

Table 2.

Spatial patterns of released agoutis (Dasyprocta leporina) in Tijuca National Park (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) (February 2010 to September 2011). M = males and F = females. Total fixes = number of fixes obtained for each individual from release to the end of the batteries or death. Number (N) excluded fixes / days = number of fixes excluded following our criterion for home-range establishment, and time (in days) from release date to the date of the first fix used to estimate the home-ranges. Home-range fixes = number of fixes used to estimate the home-ranges of each reintroduced agoutis. Distances from release site (m) = distance from release site to the centroid of the fixes used to estimate the home-ranges sizes (in parenthesis, minimum and maximum distances from release site).

10.1177_194008291400700415-table2.tif

Fig. 3.

Home-range contours (using kernel 95%; h=63.1) of agoutis (Dasyprocta leporina) reintroduced in Tijuca National Park, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The dark grey square represents the location of the acclimatization pen (release site). The dots indicate the centroid of the fixes used to estimate the home-ranges sizes for each individual. The dashed lines show the distance from the release site to the centroids. Males are in black and females in grey.

10.1177_194008291400700415-fig3.tif

We obtained 63 records of food item consumption by five different agouti individuals during 25 focal-days. A total of 22 fruit and seed morphotypes were consumed by agoutis, and 10 of them could be identified (Table 3). The species consumed most often were the jussara palm Euterpe edulis and cutieira Joannesia princeps, with 15 and 13 records respectively. The agoutis were seen burying J. princeps, Panama tree Sterculia chicha and A. heterophylus seeds (Table 3).

Table 3.

Fruits and seeds used by reintroduced agoutis (Dasyprocta leporina) in Tijuca National Park (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) (September 2010 to August 2011).

10.1177_194008291400700415-table3.tif

The estimated annual survival rate was 0.83, and the female F1 was the first one to be observed with a litter (two cubs), 241 days after the first release and 234 days after her own release. Altogether, 10 cubs were observed with four reintroduced female agoutis (F1, F3, F4 and F5) in five reproductive events during the study period (median litter size=2 cubs/litter, range=1–3), providing evidence of successful reproduction in the reintroduced population.

Discussion

According to the criteria adopted, the reintroduction of the agoutis in Tijuca National Park can be considered successful in the short-term (Fig. 4). All released agoutis reached food independence, abandoning the food supplements and feeding on items found in nature. All tracked animals established home-ranges in a defined area after release, and there was a high individual annual survival rate with evidence of breeding in the population. We believe that in most aspects that the procedures adopted before and after release were suitable and could be used by others.

Fig. 4.

Agoutis (Dasyprocta leporina) in Tijuca National Park, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Upper photo left: female F1 with the first cub born in the wild; photo credit: Marco Terranova. Upper right photo: first cub born in the wild; photo credit: Marco Terranova. Bottom-left photo: female F3 eating a seed; photo credit: Rui Salaverry

10.1177_194008291400700415-fig4.tif

The shortest quarantine to which our animals were submitted was longer than the 35 days recommended for rodents by the Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources (IBAMA). With a short quarantine period, there is an increased risk of diseases emerging after release [41]. On the other hand, with a long quarantine, the animals are more prone to contamination, stress, and injuries caused by fighting [42, 43]. The death of an agouti and the weight loss of all individuals during quarantine show that it was a stressful period for them. For future agouti reintroduction programs, we recommend a shorter quarantine than the period we used. Also, the agoutis should be separated into smaller groups of no more than five individuals (ideally with a single male per group) in each enclosure. With these precautions, the stress and fighting can be minimized during the quarantine, reducing the mortality in this stage.

The deaths which occurred in the pen show that the acclimatization period can also be critical, especially due to fighting among males. Furthermore, the dog attack upon the agoutis shows that the pen can function as a trap. The odour produced by the concentration of animals can attract predators, and if they break into the pen, the enclosed animals become easy prey [44].

On the other hand, the acclimatization was important to monitor the adaptation of the agoutis to radio collars [16]. The weight gain during the acclimatization was also important because released animals, especially the ones coming from captivity, may find it difficult to get food right after release and die of malnutrition (e.g. [44, 45]). The weight at release is thus an important predictor of post-release survival [14, 46]. We therefore do not recommend shortening the acclimatization period.

Regarding the acclimatization pen, it is important to keep in mind that fences must be strong enough not only to keep the individuals of the reintroduced species inside, but also to prevent any local predator entering the pen. In this stage it is also important to keep males separated from each other. The number of agoutis inside a 100 m2 pen at any given time must not exceed five. With these precautions, we can expect weight gain and minimize the probabilities of fighting and of attracting predators, thus reducing the mortality in this stage.

The acclimatization period and the supplementary food probably induced the agoutis to stay near the pen in the first days after release. This proximity facilitates the process of finding and monitoring the animals, allowing interventions if needed. It also favours population cohesion and reproduction. The lack of population cohesion was probably the cause of the failure of the first agouti release in TNP, which occurred without acclimatization, food supplementation, or monitoring [474849]. The importance of food supplementation is corroborated by the occasions when the animals did not abandon it voluntarily. In these cases, we had to reduce the amount of food gradually, until the animal could survive eating only items found in nature. We recommend the maintenance of the food supplementation for at least 30 days in each release, then gradually reducing supplements in cases where animals are still feeding on them, as adopted in this study.

It should be noted that the agouti home-range sizes estimated here were larger than values found in the literature. Home-range sizes estimated in this study were three times larger than those reported by Silvius and Fragoso [50] (W=44, p=0.019) and by Jorge and Peres [26] (W=36, p=0.023) for D. leporina. The comparison with D. punctata home-range sizes revealed that the ranges estimated in this study were six times larger than those reported by Aliaga-Rossel et al. [51], both for males (W=20, p=0.019) and for females (W=18, p=0.024). However, we were conservative when choosing the fixes that were used to estimate the home-range sizes by excluding data from the first days after release, when the animals are exploring the new habitat and using the food supplements. We think the large areas used do not reflect exploratory behaviour but actual home-ranges. An explanation for a larger home-range is that the TNP is an impoverished forest, where tree recruitment is low [32, 34]. This can lead to lower food resource abundance compared for example to a nut stand (Bertholletia excelsa) in Amazonia, as studied by Jorge and Peres [26]. Resource scarcity could therefore explain the large home-range sizes found in the present study.

The estimated annual survival rate was actually higher than described for natural populations of agoutis [52, 53]. These high adult survival rates are probably due to the absence of the main agouti predators in TNP [53545556], although domestic dogs have been seen chasing adult agoutis and can be a real threat to them. Capture sessions performed in 2013 showed that some of the first agoutis were still alive three years after release. The survival rates of the cubs could not be estimated, but they would probably be lower than the overall survival rates, because young agouti mortality is high in nature [53, 56]. However, the demographic patterns we found are indicative of a thriving, breeding population.

The food items that were most consumed were two tree species (E. edulis and J. princeps) that are considered under threat in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest [57, 58]. Two of the three species buried by the reintroduced agoutis (J. princeps and S. chicha) are large-seeded trees which need animals as dispersers. Zucaratto [59] observed that seeds of the large-seeded palm Astrocaryum aculeatissimum were buried and germinate only in areas where agoutis were reintroduced. For these tree species, the agoutis' scatter-hoarding behaviour can help to disseminate the seeds and enhance recruitment in a forest that lacks animal dispersers. The agoutis were also seen burying A. heterophyllus seeds, an exotic, invasive tree species. Nevertheless, the agoutis do not seem to be contributing to invasion by this species. Patches with more than 100 A. heterophyllus seedlings/m2 were found in the TNP, a defaunated forest, before the agouti reintroduction started [60], showing that this tree does not need the agoutis for its recruitment. Moreover, although we offered A. heterophyllus seeds to agoutis during acclimatization, we found no seedlings inside the acclimatization pen, indicating that the agoutis are eating rather than hoarding seeds of this species. During the study period, agoutis acted as predators of seven of the 10 species consumed. All of them have small seeds (> 1.5cm in diameter) which are generally not buried by agoutis [61]. Most of these species, however, including E. edulis (the most consumed one), are dispersed primarily by birds [62, 63], and do not depend on agoutis for seedling regeneration.

Implications for conservation

We faced some problems in the beginning of this reintroduction programme. The main one was the high agouti mortality during the pre-release stages when about half of the captured individuals died, mostly because of aggressiveness among individuals due to stress. With a more limited source population, researchers should be careful about the number of individuals they can remove from it to guarantee a minimum for the reintroduction while not jeopardizing the source population. The procedures adopted in this study and the modifications proposed can minimize stress and mortality during the pre-release stages and make agouti reintroductions more prone to success.

Contrary to what was thought, it was shown that the agoutis can and do disperse large seeds to great distances (>100 m) [31]. Moreover, these rodents carry seeds towards locations with lower conspecific tree densities [30]. These characteristics combined make the seed dispersal by agoutis highly effective, enhancing the chances of a given seed to become a seedling [64, 65]. The short-term success of the reintroduction and the interactions of the agoutis with the large-seeded trees show that this conservation tool has much potential to restore seed dispersal in Neotropical forests such as the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. This biome has been reduced to 11.4–16% of its original cover, with 80% of the remaining fragments smaller than 50 ha [66]. Many of these patches are empty forests where seed dispersal interactions have been disrupted or imbalanced by the loss of the dispersers [676869]. To replicate the reintroduction of agoutis elsewhere can be an important tool to restore seed dispersal throughout many of the Neotropical Forests.

Acknowledgments

We are indebted to Fundação Parques e Jardins – Prefeitura do Rio de Janeiro which provided the animals for reintroduction. We thank Instituto Chico Mendes para Conservação da Biodiversidade (ICMBio) for providing a license for the project and for logistic support in TNP. We thank the staff of the Fundação Jardim Zoológico do Rio de Janeiro for making this project possible through providing accommodation for the animals, veterinary screening and help with animal manipulation. We thank TNP, through I. Castro Astor, H. Zaluar, M. L. Figueira and E. Viveiros de Castro, for inviting us for this project and for helping in many ways during the process. We thank A.G. Chiarello, M.V. Vieira, J.F.S. Menezes for useful contributions for the manuscript, and A. Macrae for carefully reviewing the English. We also thank Fundação O Boticário de Proteção à Natureza, Parque Nacional da Tijuca, Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro and Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES) for funding.

References

1.

IUCN/SSC. 2013. Guidelines for Reintroductions and Other Conservation Translocations. Version 1.0. Gland, Switzerland: IUCN Species Survival Commission, viiii + 57 pp. Google Scholar

2.

Armstrong, D. P., Seddon, P. J., 2007. Directions in reintroduction biology. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 23:20–25. Google Scholar

3.

Seddon, P. J., Armstrong, D. P., Maloney, R. F., 2007. Developing the science of reintroduction biology. Conservation Biology 21:303–312. Google Scholar

4.

Fischer, J., Lindenmayer, D. B., 2000. An assessment of the published results of animal relocations. Biological Conservation 96:1–11. Google Scholar

5.

Ewen, J. G., Armstrong, D. P., Parker, K. A., Seddon, P. J., 2012. Reintroduction Biology: Integrating Science and Management. Wiley-Blackwell press, Oxford. Google Scholar

6.

Wolf, C. M., Griffith, B., Reed, C., Temple, S. A., 1996. Avian and mammalian translocations: update and reanalysis of 1987 survey data. Conservation Biology 10:1142–1154. Google Scholar

7.

Caughley, G., 1994. Directions in conservation biology. Journal of Animal Ecology 63:215–244. Google Scholar

8.

Sarrazin, F., Barbault, R., 1996. Reintroduction: challenges and lessons for basic ecology. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 11:474–478. Google Scholar

9.

Sanz, V., Grajal, A., 1998. Successful reintroduction of captive-raised yellow-shouldered Amazon parrots on Margarita Island, Venezuela. Conservation Biology 12:430–441. Google Scholar

10.

Seddon, P. J., 1999. Persistence without intervention: assessing success in wildlife reintroductions. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 14:503. Google Scholar

11.

Ostermann, S. D., Deforge, J. R., Edge, W. D., 2001. Captive breeding and reintroduction evaluation criteria: a case study of peninsular bighorn sheep. Conservation Biology 15:749–760. Google Scholar

12.

Richards, J. D., Short, J., 2003. Reintroduction and establishment of the western barred bandicoot Perameles bougainville (Marsupialia: Peramelidae) at Shark Bay, western Australia. Biological Conservation 109:181–195. Google Scholar

13.

Hayward, M. W., Adendorff, J., O'Brien, J., Sholto-Douglas, A., Bisset, C., Moolman, L. C., Bean, P., Fogarty, A., Howarth, D., Slater, R., Kerley, G. I. H., 2007. The reintroduction of large carnivores to Eastern Cape, South Africa: an assessment. Oryx 41:205–214. Google Scholar

14.

Mathews, F., Moro, D., Strachan, R., Gelling, M., Buller, N., 2006. Health surveillance in wildlife reintroductions. Biological Conservation 131:338–347. Google Scholar

15.

Bright, P.W., Morris, P.A., (1994). Animal translocation for conservation: performance of dormice in relation to release methods, origin and season. Journal of Applied Ecology 31:699–708. Google Scholar

16.

Cid, B., da Costa, R. C., Balthazar, D. A., Augusto, A. M., Pires, A. S., Fernandez, F. A. S., 2013. Preventing injuries caused by radiotelemetry collars in reintroduced red-rumped agoutis, Dasyprocta leporina (Rodentia: Dasyproctidae), in Atlantic Forest, southeastern Brazil. Zoologia 30:115–118. Google Scholar

17.

Beck, B. B., Kleiman, D. G., Dietz, J. M., Castro, I., Carvalho, C., Martins, A., Rettberg-Beck, B., 1991. Losses and reproduction in reintroduced golden lion tamarins Leontopithecus rosalia. Dodo 27:50–61. Google Scholar

18.

Vargas, A., Anderson, S. H., 1999. Effects of experience and cage enrichment on predatory skills of black-footed ferrets (Mustela nigripes). Journal of Mammalogy 80:263–269. Google Scholar

19.

Letty, J., Marchandeau, S., Clobert, J., Aubineau, J., 2000. Improving translocation success: an experimental study of anti- stress treatment and release method for wild rabbits. Animal Conservation 3:211–219. Google Scholar

20.

Wanless, R. M., Cunningham, J., Hockey, P. A., Wanless, J., White, R. W., Wiseman, R., 2002. The success of a soft-release reintroduction of the flightless Aldabra rail (Dryolimnas [cuvieri] aldabranus) on Aldabra Atoll, Seychelles. Biological Conservation 107:203–210. Google Scholar

21.

Shier, D., Owings, D., 2006. Effects of predator training on behavior and post-release survival of captive prairie dogs (Cynomys ludovicianus). Biological Conservation 132:126–135. Google Scholar

22.

Biggins, E., Godbey, J. L., Hanebury, L. R., Luce, B., Marinari, P. E., Matchett, M. R., Vargas, A., 1998. The effect of rearing methods on survival of reintroduced black-footed ferrets. Journal of Wildlife Management 62:643–653. Google Scholar

23.

Tuberville, T. D., Clark, E. E., Buhlmann, K. A., Gibbons, J. W., 2005. Translocation as a conservation tool: site fidelity and movement of repatriated gopher tortoises (Gopherus polyphemus). Animal Conservation 8:349–358. Google Scholar

24.

Ewen, J. G., Armstrong, D. P., 2007. Strategic monitoring of reintroductions in ecological restoration programmes. Ecoscience 14:401–409. Google Scholar

25.

Nowak, R. M., 1991. Walker's Mammals of the World. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, Maryland. Google Scholar

26.

Jorge, M. L., Peres, C. A., 2005. Population density and home range size of red-rumped agoutis (Dasyprocta leporina) within and outside a natural Brazil nut stand in southeastern Amazonia. Biotropica 37:317–321. Retirado de 47 Google Scholar

27.

Dubost, G., Henry, O., 2006. Comparison of diets of the acouchy, agouti and paca, the three largest terrestrial rodents of French Guianan forests. Journal of Tropical Ecology 22:641–651. Google Scholar

28.

Forget, P. M., 1990. Seed dispersal of Vouacapoua Americana (Caesalpiniaceae) by caviomorph rodents in French Guiana. Journal of Tropical Ecology 6:459–468. Google Scholar

29.

Peres, C. A., Baider, C., 1997. Seed dispersal, spatial distribution and population structure of Brazil nut tree (Bertholletia excelsa) in southeastern Amazonia. Journal of Tropical Ecology 13:595–616. Google Scholar

30.

Hirsch, B. T., Kays, R., Pereira, V. E., Jansen, P. A., 2012. Directed seed dispersal towards areas with low conspecific tree density by a scatter-hoarding rodent. Ecology Letters 15:1423–1429. Google Scholar

31.

Jansen, P. A., Hirsch, B. T., Emsens, W. J., Zamora-Gutierrez, V., Wikelsky, M., Kays, R., 2013. Thieving rodents as substitute dispersers of megafaunal seeds. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. U.S.A. 109:12610–12615. Google Scholar

32.

Freitas, S. R., Neves, C. L., Chernicharo, P., 2006. Tijuca National Park: two pioneering restorationist initiatives in Atlantic Forest in southeastern Brazil. Brazilian Journal of Biology 66:975–982. Retirado de 49 Google Scholar

33.

Oda, R. A. M., 2000. Estrutura e biodiversidade de insetos associados a galhas de Mikania glomerata Spreng. (Asteraceae) em diferentes áreas de Mata Atlântica. Master thesis, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro. Google Scholar

34.

Montezuma, R. C. M., Oliveira, C. M. R., Barros, F. A., Ribas, L. A., Galvão-Neto, M., Schneider, S., Imbroisi, E., 2005. Urban Atlantic Forest remnants diagnosis for implantation of the Frei Vellozo ecological corridor FEEMA/PDBG. In Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation, Uberlândia. Google Scholar

35.

ICMBio. 2008. Plano de Manejo do Parque Nacional da Tijuca.  http://www.planodemanejo.kit.netGoogle Scholar

36.

White, G. C., Garrott, R. A., 1990. Analysis of Wildlife Radio-tracking Data. Academic Press, San Diego. Google Scholar

37.

Moran, P. A. P., 1950. Notes on continuous stochastic phenomena. Biometrika 37: 17–23. Google Scholar

38.

Worton, B. J., 1989. Kernel methods for estimating the utilization distribution in home-range studies. Ecology 70:164–168. Google Scholar

39.

Cooch, E., White, G., 2006. Program MARK: a gentle introduction.  http://www.phidot.org/software/mark/docs/bookGoogle Scholar

40.

R Development Core Team. 2013. R: a language and environment for statistical computing. R Core Team, Vienna, Austria. Google Scholar

41.

Snyder, N. F., Derrickson, S. R., Beissinger, S. R., Wiley, J. W., Smith, T. B., Toone, W. D., Miller, B., 1996. Limitations of captive breeding in endangered species recovery. Conservation Biology 10:338–348. Google Scholar

42.

Cunningham, A. A., 1996. Disease risks of wildlife translocations. Conservation Biology 10:349–353. Google Scholar

43.

Teixeira, C., Azevedo, C., Mendl, M., Cipreste, C., Young, R., 2006. Revisiting translocation and reintroduction programmes: the importance of considering stress. Animal Behaviour 73:1–13. Google Scholar

44.

Banks, P. B., Norrdahl, K., Korpimaki, E., 2002. Mobility decisions and the predation risks of reintroduction. Biological Conservation 103:133–138. Google Scholar

45.

Peignot, P., Charpentier, M. J., Bout, N., Bourry, O., Massima, U., Dosimont, O., Terramorsi, R., Wickings, E. J., 2008. Learning from the first release project of captive-bred mandrills Mandrillus sphinx in Gabon. Oryx 42:122–131. Google Scholar

46.

Hamilton, L. P., Kelly, P. A., Williams, D. F., Kelt, D. A., Wittmer, H. U., . 2010. Factors associated with survival of reintroduced riparian brush rabbits in California. Biological Conservation 143:999–1007. Google Scholar

47.

Coimbra-Filho, A. F., Aldrighi, A. D., 1971. A restauração da fauna do Parque Nacional da Tijuca. Publicações Avulsas do Museu Nacional 57:1–30. Google Scholar

48.

Coimbra-Filho, A. F., Aldrighi, A. D., 1972. Restabelecimento da fauna no Parque Nacional da Tijuca (segunda contribuição). Brasil Florestal 3:19–33. Google Scholar

49.

Coimbra-Filho, A. F., Aldrighi, A. D., Martins, H. F., 1973. Nova contribuição ao restabelecimento da fauna do Parque Nacional da Tijuca, GB, Brasil. Brasil Florestal 4:7–25. Google Scholar

50.

Silvius, K., Fragoso, J. V., 2003. Red-rumped agouti (Dasyprocta leporina) home range use in an Amazonian Forest: implications for the aggregated distribution of forest trees. Biotropica 35:74–83. Google Scholar

51.

Aliaga-Rossel, E., Kays, R. W., Fragoso, J. M., 2008. Home-range use by the Central American agouti (Dasyprocta punctata) on Barro Colorado Island, Panama. Journal of Tropical Ecology 24:367–374. Google Scholar

52.

Aliaga-Rossel, E. R., 2004. Landscape use, ecology and home range of the agouti (Dasyprocta punctata). Master thesis, State University of New York, Stony Brook. Google Scholar

53.

Smythe, N., (1978). The natural history of the Central American agouti (Dasyprocta punctata). Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology 257:1–52. Google Scholar

54.

Aliaga-Rossel, E., Moreno, R. S., Kays, R. W., Giacalone, J., (2006). Ocelot (Leopardus pardalis) predation on agouti (Dasyprocta punctata). Biotropica 38:691–694. Google Scholar

55.

Moreno, R. S., Kays, R. W., Samudio, J. R., 2006. Competitive release in diets of ocelot (Leopardus pardalis) and puma (Puma concolor) after jaguar (Panthera onca) decline. Journal of Mammalogy 87:808–816. Google Scholar

56.

Dubost, G., Comizzoli, O., Henry, P., 2005. Seasonality of reproduction in the three largest terrestrial rodents of French Guiana forest. Mammalian Biology 70:93–109. Google Scholar

57.

IUCN. 2011. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.  http://www.iucnredlist.orgGoogle Scholar

58.

IBAMA. 2008. Lista Oficial das Espécies da Flora Brasileira Ameaçadas de Extinção.  http://www.mma.gov.br/estruturas/179/arquivos/17905122008033615Google Scholar

59.

Zuccarato, R., 2013. Os frutos que as cutias comiam: recrutamento da palmeira Astrocaryum aculeatissimum na ausência de seu principal dispersor de sementes. Master thesis, Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro. Google Scholar

60.

Abreu, R. C., Rodrigues, P. J., 2010. Exotic tree Artocarpus heterophyllus (Moraceae) invades the Brazilian Atlantic Rainforest. Rodriguesia 61:677–688. Google Scholar

61.

Galetti, M., Donatti, C. I., Steffler, C., Genini, J., Bovendorp, R.S., Fleury, M., 2010. The role of seed mass on the caching decision by agoutis, Dasyprocta leporina (Rodentia: Agoutidae). Zoologia 27:472–476. Google Scholar

62.

Galetti, M., Zipparro, V. B., Morellato, P. C., 1999. Fruiting phenology and frugivory on the palm Euterpe edulis in a lowland Atlantic Forest of Brazil. Ecotropica 5: 115–122. Google Scholar

63.

Pizo, M. A., 2002. The seed-dispersers and fruit syndromes of Myrtaceae in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. In: Seed dispersal and frugivory: ecology, evolution and conservation. Levey, D. J., Silva, W. R., Galetti, M., (Eds.), pp.129–143. CAB International Press, Oxford. Google Scholar

64.

Janzen, D. H., 1970. Herbivores and the number of tree species in tropical forests. The American Naturalist 104:501–528. Google Scholar

65.

Connell, J. H., 1971. On the role of natural enemies in preventing competitive exclusion in some marine animals and rain forest trees. In: Dynamics of Populations. Den Boer, P. J., Gradwell, G., (Eds.), pp.298–312. Wageningen, PUDOC. Google Scholar

66.

Ribeiro, M. C., Metzger, J. P., Martensen, A. C., Ponzoni, F. J., Hirota, M. M., 2009. The Brazilian Atlantic Forest: How much is left, and how is the remaining forest distributed? Implications for conservation. Biological Conservation 142:1151–1153. Google Scholar

67.

Galetti, M., Donatti, C. I., Pires, A. S., Guimarães, P. R., Jordano, P., 2006. Seed survival and dispersal of an endemic Atlantic forest palm: the combined effects of defaunation and forest fragmentation. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 151:141–149. Google Scholar

68.

Donatti, C. I., Guimarães, P. R., Galetti, M., 2009. Seed dispersal and predation in the endemic Atlantic rainforest palm Astrocaryum aculeatissimum across a gradient of seed disperser abundance. Ecological Research 24:1187–1195. Google Scholar

69.

Jorge, M. L., Howe, H. F., 2009. Can forest fragmentation disrupt a conditional mutualism? A case from central Amazon. Oecologia 161:709–718. Google Scholar
© 2014 Bruno Cid, Luiza Figueira, Ana Flora de T. e Mello, Alexandra S. Pires and Fernando A. S. Fernandez This is an open access paper. We use the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. The license permits any user to download, print out, extract, archive, and distribute the article, so long as appropriate credit is given to the authors and source of the work. The license ensures that the published article will be as widely available as possible and that your article can be included in any scientific archive. Open Access authors retain the copyrights of their papers. Open access is a property of individual works, not necessarily journals or publishers.
Bruno Cid, Luiza Figueira, Ana Flora de T. e Mello, Alexandra S. Pires, and Fernando A. S. Fernandez "Short-term success in the reintroduction of the red-humped agouti Dasyprocta leporina, an important seed disperser, in a Brazilian Atlantic Forest reserve," Tropical Conservation Science 7(4), 796-810, (15 December 2014). https://doi.org/10.1177/194008291400700415
Received: 2 September 2014; Accepted: 3 November 2014; Published: 15 December 2014
KEYWORDS
Dasyprocta leporina
frugivory
radiotracking
reintroduction
spatial patterns
Back to Top