Renata Leite Pitman

Leaving Passages for Wildlife Where the Interoceanic Highway Will Cross the Vilcabamba Amboro-Corridor, Southeastern Peru

Dr. Renata Leite Pitman capturing and collaring a male jaguar only 50 km of the highway. ©Pedro Centeno.

Giant otter in a oxbow lake just 50 km of the highway. ©Santiago Claramunt.

Andean Bear, an IUCN’s vulnerable species that will be highly affected by the highway. ©Rob Williams.

LocationCountryCategoriesDate
Cusco and Puerto Maldonado Cities, Vilcabamba Amboro-CorridorPeruCentral and Latin America, Community, Conflict20 Sep 2007

The Interoceanic Highway, connecting Brazil to the Pacific, is under construction and due for completion in 2009. Catastrophic impacts have been predicted for forests of the Amazon-Andes region, putting at risk non-contacted indigenous groups and wildlife. In Peru, the highway will bisect a globally important complex of protected areas, where key and threatened mammal species such as Andean Bears (Tremarctos ornatus), Jaguars (Panthera onca) and Giant Otters (Pteronura brasiliensis) are found. If predictions are realized, the habitat of these and other species will be fragmented, contributing to their decline. Focusing on these species, we propose to reduce the predicted impacts by raising awareness of conservation corridors and wildlife passages across the highway.

Populations of Andean Bears, Jaguars and Giant Otters, umbrella and flagship species for the terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems of the Andes-Amazon region, are known to cross the existing unpaved road. Since the highway is currently under construction, we plan to offer the local government scientific and economic reasons to maintain habitat connectivity via, e.g., the construction of underground corridors for animals that cross the highway and the use of fences to avoid animal fatalities. Our field team, composed of biologists from local universities, will train schoolteachers, park guards and tourist guides about the impact of the highway on regional wildlife. We aim to demonstrate how the presence of these species can attract tourists and can help improve the economy in the region through organized development and ecotourism. Preserving animal habitat and training local people to find their signs and show them to visitors will attract tourism to the region.

We plan to survey for signs of our focal species at least twice monthly on both sides of the highway through camera trapping, hair trapping and scat collection in order to monitor populations and to detect natural corridors. We will be also surveying all road kill found along the highway (mammals, reptiles, amphibians and birds) to identify important crossing points for other species. Based on these results, we will work with Odebrecht (the company which is paving the highway), Peru’s Ministry of Transportation and private industry to implement wildlife signs, fences, speed bumps, and wildlife passages at important crossing points.

For more information contact renata.leite@duke.edu

Project Update: November 2007

We received the following news from Renata:

"I have made several arrangements for the project take place. I traveled to Lima two weeks ago to apply for our research permit, I have several meetings with the Frankfurt Zoological Society, who is going to be our partner on this project do discuss basic bureaucracy (how to transfer the money to Peru and deal with payments, etc.). I have also met with professionals in charge of the Ministry of Education in the area, presented formally our proposal and discussed a collaboration plan. I have found also two excellent local biologists (on from Cusco, and other from Puerto Maldonado) that are interested in working with us.

I have an ongoing conversation with the professionals in charge to build the road, from Odebrecht company and we are discussing also a collaboration plan.

Also, a local reporter (Roberto Ochoa) is making a 4 page report on my project to be publish in one of the most important Peruvian popular travel magazines, called "Rumbos" (http:// www.rumbosdelperu.com/)"

Project Update: March 2008

Read the latest news on the project in the report below.

File DownloadSize
Project Update.doc2.15 MB
Interim Report

Read about the activities undertaken and findings of this project in the final report below.

File DownloadSize
Interim Report.pdf1.47 MB

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