# Genetic Diversity, Demographic Parameters, and Trophic Ecology of the Pampas Cat (Leopardus garleppi) in a Ramsar Wetland of Northwestern Peru

**Authors:** Manuel Santiago-Plata, Jennifer Adams, Janet L. Rachlow, Cindy M. Hurtado, Alvaro Garcia-Olaechea, Taal Levi, Lisette P. Waits

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/genes17030320 · Genes · 2026-03-16

## TL;DR

This study examines the genetic health and diet of Pampas cats in a Peruvian wetland, finding a small, isolated population with low genetic diversity and limited connectivity.

## Contribution

The study provides the first genetic and dietary assessment of Pampas cats in a Ramsar wetland, revealing population structure and threats from habitat degradation.

## Key findings

- Genetic diversity is moderate but shows signs of a recent bottleneck.
- The population has a small census size and very low effective population size.
- Diet is dominated by a native rodent species with no sex-specific differences.

## Abstract

Background/Objectives: Habitat degradation and fragmentation reduce population size, genetic diversity, and connectivity, increasing extinction risk in small and isolated populations. Coastal wetlands of northwestern Peru have undergone extensive anthropogenic modification, yet the genetic and ecological status of resident carnivore populations remains poorly documented. This study aimed to assess genetic diversity, relatedness, demographic signals, and diet composition of a Pampas cat (Leopardus garleppi) population inhabiting the Mangroves San Pedro de Vice (MSPV), a Ramsar-listed coastal wetland. Methods: We combined noninvasive fecal genotyping using eight nuclear microsatellite loci with vertebrate DNA metabarcoding. Scat samples were collected across three field seasons (2019–2021). Individual identification, genetic diversity metrics, genetic mark–recapture estimation of census size (Nc), effective population size (Ne), bottleneck tests, and relatedness analyses were performed to evaluate population status and kin structure. Dietary composition was characterized using metabarcoding and assessed for sex-specific differences. Results: Sixty-eight scats yielded multilocus genotypes for nine individuals (six males, three females). Genetic analyses revealed moderate diversity (mean allelic richness = 3.47; observed heterozygosity = 0.69; expected heterozygosity = 0.58) and evidence consistent with a recent genetic bottleneck. Genetic mark–recapture analyses estimated a small census size (Nc = 9; 95% CI: 7.0–9.0), while the effective population size was markedly low (Ne = 2.4; 95% CI: 1.5–7.4), yielding an Ne/Nc ratio of ~0.27. Multiple first-order kin dyads were detected, indicating strong local kin structure and limited external recruitment. Metabarcoding identified eight vertebrate prey species, with diet dominated by the native rodent Aegialomys xanthaeolus. No significant sex-specific differences in diet composition were detected. Conclusions: The MSPV Pampas cat population represents a small, kin-structured range-edge population showing signatures consistent with recent genetic erosion and restricted connectivity. These patterns align with isolation in a degraded coastal wetland landscape, highlighting the importance of habitat protection, prey resource conservation, and restoration of functional connectivity to support long-term population persistence.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Aegialomys xanthaeolus (taxon 478562), Mus musculus (taxon 10090)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Pampas Cat [taxon 61406], Aegialomys xanthaeolus (yellowish rice rat, species) [taxon 478562]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13026185/full.md

## References

153 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13026185/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13026185