Lilliana PiedraLeonardo Maffei2026-03-222026-03-22201510.15517/rbt.v48i1.18707https://doi.org/10.15517/rbt.v48i1.18707https://andeanlibrary.org/handle/123456789/56639Citaciones: 1The effect ofhuman activity on terrestrial marnmals was studied with footprint counts in Guanacaste, Costa Rica (loo30"N, 85°40'W) in February 1998 (in fifty 2 m2 quadrats). The most cornmon species were Canis latrans, Didelphis marsupialis. Odoicoleus virginianus. Dasyprocta punctata andTapirus bairdii. No stas­tically significant association was found between humna activity and marnmal frequency in the footprint counts.enGeographyPhysicsEfecto de las actividades humanas sobre la diversidad de mamíferos terrestres en un gradiente altitudinalarticle