Aline Giroux - Giant anteater with tracker
Aline Giroux - Giant anteater with tracker

Shrinking forests leads to big home ranges for giant anteaters

Embargoed until: Publicly released:
Peer-reviewed: This work was reviewed and scrutinised by relevant independent experts.

Giant anteaters require more space as their habitats become less forested, according to international research. The researchers attached trackers to 19 wild anteaters and found that in areas with lower proportions of tree cover, the anteaters had larger home ranges. The team suggest that this is due to the giant anteater's inability to regulate body temperature effectively. They also found that male anteaters tended to have larger home ranges than females, probably to increase their chance of finding a mate.

Journal/conference: PLOS ONE

Link to research (DOI): 10.1371/journal.pone.0253345

Organisation/s: Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul (UFMS), Brazil

Funder: This study was financed in part by the Coordenac¸ão de Aperfeic¸oamento de Pessoal de Nı´vel Superior, Brasil (CAPES; https://www.gov.br/capes/pt-br) under finance code 001, PROEX 88887.360861/2019-00 to AG, and PNPD 1694744 to ZO. It was also supported by the Junta de Andalucı´a under Research Postdoctoral Contract 401 to ZO, and by the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP; https://fapesp.br), under finance codes 2013/18526-9 to AB and 2013/ 04957-8 to AB. Part of the costs for the field work were covered by the Giant Armadillo Conservation Program, which benefited from multiple grants, mostly from North American and European zoos listed at www.icasconservation.org.br/partners. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Media release

From: PLOS

Peer reviewed                                     Observational study                                        Animals

The fewer forests, the more space giant anteaters need

GPS-tagged anteaters reveal differences in space use according to sex, body size and forest cover

Giant anteaters living in less forested habitats make use of larger home ranges, according to a study by Aline Giroux at the Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul and colleagues, publishing August 18 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE. This behavior may allow them to incorporate forest patches into their territory, the authors say.

Giant anteaters (Myrmecophaga tridactyla) are found across Central and South America in savannah habitats made up of a mosaic of forests, grasslands, and wetlands. Their bodies are relatively poor at thermoregulation, so they rely on forest patches — which are thermal shelters — to help regulate body temperature. To understand how these gentle giants make use of their space, the researchers caught, measured, and GPS-tagged 19 wild giant anteaters in Santa Barbara Ecological Station in São Paulo state and Baía das Pedras Ranch in Mato Grosso do Sul state in Brazil. The researchers analysed the effects of sex, body size, and forest cover on movement and home range size, and found that males tended to range across a larger area and use the space more intensively than females of a similar body size, possibly to increase their chances of finding a mate. In habitats with a lower proportion of tree cover, both male and female anteaters had larger home ranges, which may allow them to access forest fragments as a refuge from extreme temperatures.

As climate change brings increasingly frequent and severe extreme weather events, the milder microclimate of forest patches is likely to become more important for these vulnerable mammals, putting the species at increasing risk from deforestation. The authors highlight the role of forests as an important thermal resource influencing how much space giant anteaters need. They also suggest that conservation management efforts should focus on protecting forest fragments within anteaters’ home ranges to help them behaviorally thermoregulate.

The authors add: “The authors highlight the role of forests as an important thermal resource driving how much space giant anteaters need.”

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