Big cats are still walking in El Salvador First photographic records of Puma concolor (Linnaeus, 1771) and an overview of historical records in the country
Voir/ Ouvrir
Date
01-01-2020Auteur
Álvarez, Francisco S
Sustainable development goals
ODS 15 - Vida de ecosistemas terrestres
Type
Artículo
Metadata
Afficher la notice complèteRésumé
The presence of Puma, Puma concolor, has been controversial in El Salvador due to the lack of published, verifiable data. We surveyed 119 sites in Montecristo National Park and 17 sites in the Rio Sapo basin using wildlife cameras. We detected Pumas in both areas, representing the first photographic records for El Salvador. We call for a national Puma conservation strategy with research in basic ecology and migration corridors, regulation of hunting, management of livestock losses, and public acceptance programs. The Rio Sapo basin should be granted formal protection.
Keywords
Animal salvaje||wild animals||animal silvestre||animal sauvage, Área protegida, Cámaras trampa, Ecología animal, El Salvador||El Salvador||El Salvador||El Salvador, Captura con cámaras trampa||camera trapping||undefined||piège photographique, Puma||cougars||puma||couguar, Central america, Distribution, Mamífero||mammals||mamífero||mammifère, Montecristo, Río sapo,
Delegation
Sede Central
Éditeur
Pensoft Publishers
Is part of
Check List
Status
openAccess
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-uri-link
http://doi: 10.15560/16.3.563

