Resumen:
Interactions between species and individuals can determine their survival in the wild. Most of the time these relationships are difficult to study in situ by direct observation. However, technology can help collect these data with minimal impact on animals’ behaviour. Egg stage is certainly the most vulnerable life stage in crocodilians, but few studies have focused on animal species visiting crocodilian nests and associated egg predation. Herein, we use camera-traps in four Mexican states (Chiapas, Oaxaca, Jalisco, Tabasco) to determine vertebrate species and egg predators associated with wild nests of Caiman crocodilus chiapasius, Crocodylus acutus and Crocodylus moreletii. We recorded 72 species of vertebrates at nesting sites and obtained the first photographic evidence of crocodilian egg predation by Caracara cheriway, Cuniculus paca, Didelphis virginiana and Procyon lotor. We also identified commensalism, cooperation, and predation as types of interactions within observed nesting areas, which indicates the importance of crocodilian nesting areas for other wild vertebrates. Finally, we found that crocodilian egg predation depends on species richness present in the area of study, as well as crocodilian size.