Current status of two endangered Caribbean rodents |
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Authors: | Garrett C Clough |
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Institution: | Center for Natural Areas, 1525 New Hampshire Avenue, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20036, USA |
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Abstract: | Living rodents of the genus Geocapromys of the hutia family have been known during this century on three Caribbean islands (Walker, 1968). Visits were made in 1974 to Jamaica and Little Swan Island to check the current status of two of these endangered populations. It appears from these field investigations that the Swan Island hutia, Geocapromys brownii thoracatus, has been exterminated from Little Swan Island. The main cause may have been predation by cats introduced in the late 1950s and after. The Jamaican hutia, G. b. brownii, remains in three remote areas of Jamaica. It exists at low population levels which have been much reduced from those occurring 30 years ago. The Jamaican hutias are shy and secretive in habits compared to the undisturbed Bahamian hutias, G. i. ingrahami, of East Plana Cay, Bahama Islands. |
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