Diversity and biogeographical patterns in the diet of the culpeo in South America
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2024
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Wiley-Blackwell
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Lozano, J., Guntiñas, M., Cisneros, R.,Llorente, E., Duro, A., & Malo, A. F. (2024). Diversity andbiogeographical patterns in the diet of the culpeo in SouthAmerica. Ecology and Evolution, 14, e70176. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70176
Abstract
Here we describe the dietary patterns of the culpeo or Andean fox (Lycalopex culpaeus) on a biogeographical scale. We also analyse the influence of exotic lagomorphs on its diet and explore differences between culpeo subspecies. We selected 17 mutually comparable diet studies, which include 19 independent diet assessments. Then, we extracted and standardized the values of the different diet components from these studies and calculated the relative frequency of occurrence of the 10 main trophic groups that we found. Further, we calculated the Shannon-Wiener H′ trophic diversity index. The results showed that small mammals (41%), lagomorphs (21%), invertebrates (12.4%) and large herbivores (7.3%) were the most consumed groups. A factorial analysis of all trophic groups rendered four orthogonal factors that were used as response variables in relation to a set of environmental predictors. Altitude correlated with most factors (i.e. trophic groups). Exotic lagomorphs were consumed in lowlands, in higher latitudes and in regions showing high values of the human footprint index, enriching in those areas the culpeo's trophic spectrum. There were no differences in diet between the two main culpeo subspecies analysed, L.c. culpaeus and L.c. andinus. Finally, the best explanatory models (general linear model) of trophic diversity selected, using Akaike's information criterion, showed that the most diverse diets were those composed of large herbivores, edentates, carnivorous species, birds and herptiles (i.e. reptiles and frogs). Trophic diversity was low in rainy areas where big rodents dominated the diet. Neither latitude nor altitude seemed to have an effect on the trophic diversity of the culpeos, as they were not retained by the final models.
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This research was carried out partly with the economic support of the Universidad Técnica Particular de Loja (UTPL), Ecuador. JL was supported by a Prometeo Fellowship from SENESCYT, the National Agency for Education and Science of Ecuador, between 2014 and 2015. He was also supported by the Department of Biodiversity, Ecology and Evolution at Complutense University of Madrid (Spain) during the editing of this article. AFM was supported by a Ramón y Cajal research contract from the MINECO (RYC-2016-21114).