PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

High proportion of male faeces in jaguar populations.

  • Francisco Palomares,
  • Séverine Roques,
  • Cuauhtémoc Chávez,
  • Leandro Silveira,
  • Claudia Keller,
  • Rahel Sollmann,
  • Denise Mello do Prado,
  • Patricia Carignano Torres,
  • Begoña Adrados,
  • José Antonio Godoy,
  • Anah Tereza de Almeida Jácomo,
  • Natália Mundim Tôrres,
  • Mariana Malzoni Furtado,
  • José Vicente López-Bao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052923
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 12
p. e52923

Abstract

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Faeces provide relevant biological information which includes, with the application of genetic techniques, the sex and identity of individuals that defecated, thus providing potentially useful data on the behaviour and ecology of individuals, as well as the dynamics and structure of populations. This paper presents estimates of the sex ratio of different felid species (jaguar, Panthera onca; puma, Puma concolor; and ocelot/margay, Leopardus pardalis/Leopardus wiedi) as observed in field collected faeces, and proposes several hypotheses that could explain the strikingly high proportion of faeces from male jaguars. The proportion of male and female faeces was estimated using a non-invasive faecal sampling method in 14 study areas in Mexico and Brazil. Faecal samples were genetically analysed to identify the species, the sex and the individual (the latter only for samples identified as belonging to jaguars). Considering the three species, 72.6% of faeces (n = 493) were from males; however, there were significant differences among them, with the proportion from males being higher for jaguars than for pumas and ocelots/margays. A male-bias was consistently observed in all study areas for jaguar faeces, but not for the other species. For jaguars the trend was the same when considering the number of individuals identified (n = 68), with an average of 4.2±0.56 faeces per male and 2.0±0.36 per female. The observed faecal marking patterns might be related to the behaviour of female jaguars directed toward protecting litters from males, and in both male and female pumas, to prevent interspecific aggressions from male jaguars. The hypothesis that there are effectively more males than females in jaguar populations cannot be discarded, which could be due to the fact that females are territorial and males are not, or a tendency for males to disperse into suboptimal areas for the species.