New records of tepezcuincle (Cuniculus paca) in Puebla, Central Mexico
Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad 83: 872-874, 2012
DOI:10.7550/rmb.28296
Research note
New records of tepezcuincle (Cuniculus paca) in Puebla, Central Mexico
Nuevos registros de tepezcuincle (Cuniculus paca) en Puebla, centro de México
Osvaldo Eric Ramírez-Bravo1,2 and Lorna Hernández-Santín3
Durrell Institute for Conservation Ecology, Marlowe Building University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent, CT2 7NR, England.
Departamento de Ciencias Químico-Biológicas, Universidad de las Américas, Puebla, Santa Catarina Mártir, S/N, 72820 Cholula, Puebla, México.
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CREANATURA, A.C., Calle Quetzalcóatl No. 5, 2da. Sección de Quetzalcóatl, 72960 Puebla, Puebla, México.
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Abstract. The state of Puebla has little information about mammal presence and distribution. In a study to determine
jaguar presence using camera traps and interviews, we obtained 16 new records of tepezcuincle (Cuniculus paca) in
different vegetation types such as tropical rainforest and cloud forest, as well as in coffee plantations. The records prove
that the species is widely spread along the Sierra Norte of Puebla, but the distribution of populations in the Sierra Negra
is uncertain.
Key words: Cuniculus paca, Puebla, Rio Necaxa drainage basin, Sierra Negra, Sierra Norte, tepezcuincle, lowland
paca.
Resumen. El estado de Puebla tiene poca información sobre presencia y distribución de mamíferos. En un estudio para
determinar la presencia del jaguar, mediante cámaras y encuestas, logramos obtener 16 nuevos registros de tepezcuincle
(Cuniculus paca) en diferentes tipos de vegetación como selvas medianas y bosque mesófilo de montaña,además de
cafetales. Estos registros prueban que la especie se distribuye ampliamente a lo largo de la sierra Norte de Puebla; sin
embargo, se desconoce la distribución de las poblaciones en la sierra Negra.
Palabras clave: Cuniculus paca, Puebla, cuenca hidrológica Río Necaxa, sierra Negra, sierra Norte, tepezcuincle, tuza
real.
The tepezcuincle (Cuniculus paca) is a nocturnal
and solitary rodent (Aquino et al., 2009) found along
tropical woodlands (Ramírez-Pulido et al., 2001) at
elevations between sea level and 2 329 msnm (Botello
et al., 2005). It has a wide range of distribution, from
Mexico to northern Argentina (Aquino et al., 2009),
and it represents the largest rodent in Mexico, where it
has been previously recorded in several states (LópezWilchis and López-Jardines, 1998; Ramírez-Pulido et
al., 2001; Alcantara-Salinas and Rivera Hernández,
2008; Contreras-Díaz et al., 2009; Mejenes-López and
Hernández-Bautista, 2009; Tlapaya and Gallina, 2010).
In Puebla, previous accounts correspond to 2 localities
in the Sierra Norte (Zapotitlán de Méndez and Olintla),
which were collected in tropical woodland habitat
(Ramírez-Pulido et al., 2001). Here, we present 16 new
records of tepezcuincle, which contribute to delimit its
distribution in Puebla.
Recibido: 06 noviembre 2011; aceptado: 30 marzo 2012
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The reports were obtained opportunistically from
January 2009 to October 2010, while conducting a field
survey for the project “The jaguar in Puebla: presence and
human relations” (Fig. 1). The study area is located in the
Sierra Norte and Sierra Negra regions of northern Puebla,
encompassing an area of 5 709.82 km2 that includes 55
municipalities. Our records were obtained mainly through
interviews with hunters, ranchers, and tanneries in the
area. Field corroboration was done using 23 camera-traps
(Wildview Xtreme 4, Bushnell, and Cuddeback), set in
forested areas of the Sierra Norte. Following Silver (2004)
we placed the cameras 40 to 50 cm off the ground along
roads, trails, water holes, and other places with recent
animal tracks or evidence of activity. We set the traps for
a month before moving them to a new location to cover
as much area as possible; depending on the patch size, we
placed them within the same or moved them to another
patch.
We obtained a total of 16 new records that resulted
from camera-traps (4 photographs), signs (a set of
tracks, a nest, and bite marks), mounted specimens
02/10/2012 09:27:23 p.m.
Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad 83: 872-874, 2012
DOI:10.7550/rmb.28296
Figure 1. New records of Tepezcuincle (Cuniculus paca) in
Puebla.
(3 individuals), and oral reports (7 accounts). The first
photograph was taken at 3:04 a.m. on August 9, 2009,
in a canyon with tropical rainforest immediately beside
the Necaxa River, near the community of Telolotla in the
municipality of Zihuateutla (20°12’47” N, 97°54’38”
W). The second photograph was taken at 2:34 a.m. on
July 7, 2010, in a patch of rainforest close to an orange
orchard and induced grassland, near the community of
Metlaltloyuca in the municipality of Francisco Z. Mena
(20°43’56” N, 97°50’59” W). The third photograph was
obtained at 5:28 a.m. on August 8, 2010, close to a coffee
and a bean plantation, near the community of Huehuetla
in the municipality of Huehuetla (20°6’17” N, 97°37’30”
W). The final photograph was taken at 2:14 a.m. on
August 9, 2010, in a coffee plantation, near the locality
of Xicotepec de Juárez in the municipality of Xicotepec
(20°16’51” N, 97°57’41” W).
Moreover, we have 2 accounts of sign-evidence. We
found tracks on nests and bites on trees in a preserved
tropical rainforest that runs along the canyon of the
Zempoala River, located near the community of Tuxtla
in the municipality of Zapotitlán de Méndez (20°00’5”
N, 97°39’16” W). The second sign-record was obtained
near a coffee plantation in the upper part of the Necaxa
River Canyon, near the community of Lagunillas in the
municipality of Zihuateutla (20º13’21” N, 97º56’16”
W). This means that we found evidence of tepezcuincle
in several vegetation types; which agrees with previous
findings that mention the great habitat-adaptation capability
of tepezcuincle (Zucaratto et al., 2010). The presence of
tepezcuincle in coffee plantations has been previously
recorded in the state of Veracruz (Tlapaya and Gallina,
2010), which might be explained by its capacity to consume
several agricultural plants such as pepper (Pimienta spp.)
and bananas (Musa paradisiaca) (Zucaratto et al., 2009).
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Furthermore, we found mounted specimens in the
communities of Jonotla (20°01’58” N, 97°34’14” W)
and Tuzampan de Galeana (20°03’52” N, 97°34’28” W)
in the municipalities of the same name that are located
along the tropical rainforest of Tecolutla River Canyon.
The specimen found in Jonotla was hunted 10 years ago,
while the other, from Tuzamapan was hunted in January
2010. The third individual was hunted 4 years ago in
tropical cloud forest in the community of Nanacatlán in
the municipality of Zapotitlán de Méndez (20°00’13” N,
97°40’32” W).
Finally, when we conducted our interviews, we
asked locals to identify different species from an array
of pictures. Through these, we obtained oral reports
from local hunters in the Sierra Norte and one from the
Sierra Negra who mentioned that there is active taking of
tepezcuincle, wit (...truncated)