74 



100 



03 

 Cl, 



K 40- 



Ohi Apa Dpu Nna Tpe Tta Mam Ovi 



SPECIES 



Cci Ou Ove Aoc 



I GRAVE) ^3 UCt/HDOa I I NOT G/I/B ^S UHOOWK 



Figure 3-1. Reproductive status of female birds and mammals. Animals were categorized as gravid, 

 lactating/brooding, not gravid/lactating/brooding, or unknown (abbreviations correspond with scientific 

 name; Ohi = pocket gopher, Apa = paca, Dpu = agouti, Nna = coati, Tpe = white-lipped peccary, 

 Tta = collared peccary. Mam = brocket deer, Ovi = white-tailed deer, Cci = thicket tinamou, Cru = 

 great curassow, Ove = plain chachalaca, and Aoc = ocellated turkey). 



coati, for example, was taken primarily during 9/90-10/90 (48% of the take during two months), and to 

 a lesser extent during 11/89-3/90 (37% of the take during five months; Figure 3-2D). 

 The brocket deer and white-tailed deer also followed this pattern in that take was relatively high during 

 a 2-4 months and then low or absent during the remaining months (Figure 3-3C & 3-3D). 



Birds were taken primarily during 1/90-7/90 (Figure 3-4). For the thicket tinamou, great 

 curassow, and the ocellated turkey take was primarily during one-two month periods that differed 

 between species. Take of the plain chachalaca was primarily during 1/90-3/90 (50% of total), but data 

 collection for this species was discontinued after 7/90. 



Gravid female mammals were taken throughout the study. Agoutis with embryos or fetuses 

 were noted during 5 months (January, March, April, June, and August 1990), while gravid pacas were 



