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Wildfires disproportionately affected jaguars in the Pantanal

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Wildfires disproportionately affected jaguars in the Pantanal

A. E. D. Barros, R. G. Morato, et al.

The Pantanal wetland, home to a crucial jaguar population, faces significant threats from mega-fires, climate change, and land-use changes. The devastating 2020 fires impacted nearly half of the jaguar population, causing severe habitat loss and injury. This research, conducted by experts including Alan Eduardo de Barros and Ronaldo Gonçalves Morato, emphasizes the urgent need to combat anthropogenic drought and implement protective measures for these majestic animals.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
The Pantanal wetland harbors the second largest population of jaguars in the world. Alongside climate and land-use changes, the recent mega-fires in the Pantanal may pose a threat to the jaguars’ long-term survival. To put these growing threats into perspective, we addressed the reach and intensity of fires that have affected jaguar conservation in the Pantanal ecoregion over the last 16 years. The 2020 fires were the most severe in the annual series, burned 31% of the Pantanal and affected 45% of the estimated jaguar population (87% of these in Brazil); 79% of the home range areas, and 54% of the protected areas within home ranges. Fires consumed core habitats and injured several jaguars, the Pantanal’s apex predator. Displacement, hunger, dehydration, territorial defence, and lower fecundity are among the impacts that may affect the abundance of the species. These impacts are likely to affect other less mobile species and, therefore, the ecological stability of the region. A solution to prevent the recurrence of mega-fires lies in combating the anthropogenic causes that intensify drought conditions, such as implementing actions to protect springs, increasing the number and area of protected areas, regulating fire use, and allocating fire brigades before dry seasons.
Publisher
Communications Biology
Published On
Oct 13, 2022
Authors
Alan Eduardo de Barros, Ronaldo Gonçalves Morato, Christen H. Fleming, Renata Pardini, Luiz Gustavo R. Oliveira-Santos, Walfrido M. Tomas, Daniel L. Z. Kantek, Fernando R. Tortato, Carlos Eduardo Fragoso, Fernando C. C. Azevedo, Jeffrey J. Thompson, Paulo Inácio Prado
Tags
Pantanal
jaguars
mega-fires
climate change
land-use changes
conservation
biodiversity
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