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October 23, 2018

Wildlife on the highway to hell: Roadkill in the largest wetland, Pantanal region, Brazil

Roadkills on the BR-262 highway, Pantanal region, Brazil. Credit: Ricardo Fraga and Wagner Fischer
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Roadkills on the BR-262 highway, Pantanal region, Brazil. Credit: Ricardo Fraga and Wagner Fischer

Having systematically monitored wild animals killed on the Brazilian federal highway BR-262, which passes through the Pantanal region, a research team from the , Brazil, published their data concerning birds and reptiles in the open access journal .

Apart from information crucial for future conservation activities, the provides new and unexpected roadkill records, including the Black-and-white hawk-eagle.

Authored by Wagner Fischer and his colleagues Raquel Faria de Godoi and Antonio Conceição Paranhos Filho, the article is part of the of vertebrate mortality in the region. A separate paper of theirs is planned to present the data concerning mammals gathered during the same survey, which took place between 1996 and 2000.

Having mapped bird and reptile roadkill on the highway between the cities of Campo Grande and Corumbá in the Brazilian savannah, the team reports a total of 930 representing 29 reptile and 47 bird species. In addition, the data provide the first regional geographic record of the colubrid snake Hydrodynastes bicinctus.

The researchers conclude that the species richness observed in the road-killed animals clearly confirms earlier concerns about wildlife-vehicle collisions in the Pantanal region. Such accidents lead to long-term and chronic impact on both wildlife and road safety.

Adult individual of Erythrolamprus aesculapii captured in roadside habitats of BR-262. Credit: Michel Passos
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Adult individual of Erythrolamprus aesculapii captured in roadside habitats of BR-262. Credit: Michel Passos

"Mitigation of on this road continues to claim urgency for biodiversity conservation and for human and animal safety and care," say the authors.

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"For managers, the main goal should be to determine target species of greatest concern, focusing on those vulnerable to local extinction or those which represent major risks of serious accidents."

In the past, the team's dataset had already been used as a guide to road fauna management. In particular, it was used by government road managers when planning animal overpassess and underpassess equipped with roadside fences as part of the long-term project . So far, however, only some of the less efficient safety methods, such as signs and lowered speed limits, have been applied at the most critical points.

Adult individual of Xenodon matogrossensis captured in roadside habitats of BR-262. Credit: Cyntia Santos
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Adult individual of Xenodon matogrossensis captured in roadside habitats of BR-262. Credit: Cyntia Santos

Over the past several years, a few independent studies have been conducted to monitor roadkill in a similar manner. Two of them ( and ) looked into mammal-vehicle collisions, while the recorded reptiles and birds as well. All of them serve to demonstrate that BR-262 continues to be a major cause for the regional wildlife mortality, which in turn increases the risks of serious accidents.

"BR-262 keeps its inglorious fame as a for human and wild lives," points out lead author Wagner Fischer.

More information: Wagner Fischer et al, Roadkill records of reptiles and birds in Cerrado and Pantanal landscapes, Check List (2018).

Provided by Pensoft Publishers

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