42 results on '"Peres, Carlos"'
Search Results
2. Prospects for freshwater turtle population recovery are catalyzed by pan-Amazonian community-based management.
- Author
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Norris, Darren, Peres, Carlos A., Michalski, Fernanda, and Gibbs, James P.
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TURTLE populations , *TURTLES , *LOGGERHEAD turtle , *WILDLIFE recovery , *ANIMAL populations , *WATERSHEDS - Abstract
Sustainable use as a mechanism for the conservation and recovery of exploited wildlife populations remains intensely debated, including for freshwater turtles, a diverse and imperiled group of aquatic reptiles that are an important food source for many residents of tropical regions. Here we evaluated the geographical extent of recovery options for a heavily exploited tropical freshwater turtle fauna across 8.86 M km2 of South American river catchments under scenarios of Business-as-Usual (BAU), Protection (Pr) and Community-Based-Management (CBM). For the widespread indicator species, Podocnemis unifilis , demographic analysis showed that populations subject to moderate levels of female harvest (≤10%) can recover over broad areas if concurrent headstarting of hatchlings is practiced more widely. With regional strengthening of the protected area network unlikely, CBM developed with harvest frameworks derived from demographic rates appropriate to tropical species could catalyze a rapid continental scale recovery of Amazonian freshwater turtles within a few decades. • Although 32.7% of pan-Amazon rivers are protected, 57.2% (124 K km) are both accessible to turtle harvesters and unprotected. • Severe (≥50%) and rapid (<50 year) population losses were projected across 60% of the pan-Amazonian range (5.3 M km2). • Protected areas alone are insufficient to ensure the future range-scale viability of populations. • If community-based management (CBM) is implemented we predict fourfold continental scale population increase within 50 years. • This and related turtles have potential for continental scale conservation gains if CBM can be supported over broad areas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Coarse- and fine-scale patterns ofdistribution and habitat selection placesan Amazonian floodplain curassow indouble jeopardy.
- Author
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Leite, Gabriel A., Farias, Izeni P., Gonçalves, André L. S., Hawes, Joseph E., and Peres, Carlos A.
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HABITAT selection ,FLOODPLAIN ecology ,FLOODPLAINS ,FLOODPLAIN forests ,RIPARIAN areas - Abstract
Patterns of habitat selection are influenced by local productivity, resource availability, and predation risk. Species have taken millions of years to hone the macro- and micro-habitats they occupy, but these may now overlap with contemporary human threats within natural species ranges. Wattled Curassow (Crax globulosa), an endemic galliform species of the western Amazon, is threatened by both hunting and habitat loss, and is restricted to white-water floodplain forests of major Amazonian rivers. In this study conducted along the Juruá River, Amazonas, Brazil, we quantified the ranging ecology and fine-scale patterns of habitat selection of the species. We estimated the home range size of C. globulosa using conventional VHF telemetry. To estimate patterns of habitat selection, we used geo-locations of day ranges to examine the extent and intensity of use across the floodplain, which were then compared to a high-resolution flood map of the study area. We captured two females and one male, which we monitored for 13 months between September 2014 and September 2015. Average home range size was 283 ha, based on the 95% aLoCoH estimator. Wattled Curassows selected areas of prolonged flood pulses (six to eight months/year) and had a consistent tendency to be near open water, usually in close proximity to river banks and lakes, especially during the dry season. Amazonian floodplains are densely settled, and the small portions of floodplain habitat used by Wattled Curassows are both the most accessible to hunters and most vulnerable to deforestation. As a result, the geographic and ecological distribution of Wattled Curassows places them at much higher extinction risk at multiple spatial scales, highlighting the need to consider habitat preferences within their conservation strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Urban waste disposal explains the distribution of Black Vultures (Coragyps atratus) in an Amazonian metropolis: management implications for birdstrikes and urban planning.
- Author
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de Araujo, Giase M., Peres, Carlos A., Baccaro, Fabricio B., and Guerta, Rafael S.
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SEWAGE disposal ,WASTE management ,URBAN planning ,AIRCRAFT bird collisions ,VULTURES ,BIRD populations - Abstract
Collision rates between aircraft and birds have been rising worldwide. The increases in both air traffic and population sizes of large-bodied birds in cities lacking urban planning result in human-wildlife conflicts, economic loss and even lethal casualties. Black Vultures (Coragyps atratus) represent the most hazardous bird to Brazilian civil and military aviation on the basis of their flight behavior, body mass and consequently physical damage to aircraft following collisions. This study investigated how storage apparatus and type of organic residue discarded in public street markets modulate the spatial distribution and abundance of urban Black Vultures in the largest city in the Amazon (Manaus, Brazil). We estimated Black Vulture abundance in relation to the type of solid human waste (animal or plant), the type of waste storage containers and market sizes in terms of the number of vendor stalls at 20 public markets. We also visually quantified the abundance of Black Vultures in urban markets in relation to air traffic. Our results suggest that urban solid waste storage procedures currently used (or the lack thereof) are related to the occurrence and abundance of Black Vultures. Moreover, storage type and the proportion of animal protein (red meat and fish) within rubbish bins directly affects foraging aggregations in vultures. We recommend that policymakers should invest more efforts in building larger and more resistant closable waste containers to avoid organic solid waste exposure. We also identified five outdoor markets as urgent priorities to improve waste disposal. Finally, our waste management guidelines would not only reduce aviation collision risks but also benefit human health and well-being in most cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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5. Terrestrial mammal responses to habitat structure and quality of remnant riparian forests in an Amazonian cattle-ranching landscape.
- Author
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Zimbres, Barbara, Peres, Carlos A., and Machado, Ricardo Bomfim
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HABITATS , *RIPARIAN forests , *RANCHING , *DEFORESTATION - Abstract
Extensive 1970–2010 deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon has generated a ~ 1.5 Mha fragmented region known as the ‘arc of deforestation’. Farmers and cattle ranchers throughout Brazil are legally required to set-aside riparian forest strips within their landholdings, but recent legislative changes have relaxed the minimum mandatory conditions of these riparian forests. In this context, we assessed the functional role of riparian forest remnants as landscape connectors for medium to large-bodied terrestrial mammals in a vast fragmented landscape of southern Amazonia. We selected 38 riparian forest strips and five riparian sites within continuous forest, installed four to five camera-traps along each riparian zone (199 camera-trap stations), and sampled the terrestrial mammal assemblage for 60 days per station during the dry seasons of 2013 and 2014. We compared mammal use of riparian forests within both continuous and highly fragmented forests, and examined the effects of corridor width, corridor habitat structure, and landscape context on mammal species richness, composition, and functional diversity, all of which were higher in continuous forests than in riparian remnants. Functional diversity differences between corridor type was trait-independent and mediated by differences in species richness. Forest habitat degradation was associated with overall lower species richness, whereas forest specialists were more species-rich in increasingly wider corridors. Compositional shifts indicate that deforestation and forest degradation favours matrix-tolerant species with lower levels of forest habitat specificity. We show the potential landscape connectivity role for forest mammals of riparian corridors, whose width and forest degradation status are key predictors of community-wide responses. We provide evidence on the importance of these relict riparian strips to forest vertebrates, strengthening the scientific arguments that help justify the recently embattled legal requirements to maintain effective riparian corridors in Brazil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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6. Temporal Decay in Timber Species Composition and Value in Amazonian Logging Concessions.
- Author
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Richardson, Vanessa A. and Peres, Carlos A.
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TIMBER , *COMPOSITION of trees , *LOGGING , *NATURAL resources , *SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
Throughout human history, slow-renewal biological resource populations have been predictably overexploited, often to the point of economic extinction. We assess whether and how this has occurred with timber resources in the Brazilian Amazon. The asynchronous advance of industrial-scale logging frontiers has left regional-scale forest landscapes with varying histories of logging. Initial harvests in unlogged forests can be highly selective, targeting slow-growing, high-grade, shade-tolerant hardwood species, while later harvests tend to focus on fast-growing, light-wooded, long-lived pioneer trees. Brazil accounts for 85% of all native neotropical forest roundlog production, and the State of Pará for almost half of all timber production in Brazilian Amazonia, the largest old-growth tropical timber reserve controlled by any country. Yet the degree to which timber harvests beyond the first-cut can be financially profitable or demographically sustainable remains poorly understood. Here, we use data on legally planned logging of ~17.3 million cubic meters of timber across 314 species extracted from 824 authorized harvest areas in private and community-owned forests, 446 of which reported volumetric composition data by timber species. We document patterns of timber extraction by volume, species composition, and monetary value along aging eastern Amazonian logging frontiers, which are then explained on the basis of historical and environmental variables. Generalized linear models indicate that relatively recent logging operations farthest from heavy-traffic roads are the most selective, concentrating gross revenues on few high-value species. We find no evidence that the post-logging timber species composition and total value of forest stands recovers beyond the first-cut, suggesting that the commercially most valuable timber species become predictably rare or economically extinct in old logging frontiers. In avoiding even more destructive land-use patterns, managing yields of selectively-logged forests is crucial for the long-term integrity of forest biodiversity and financial viability of local industries. The logging history of eastern Amazonian old-growth forests likely mirrors unsustainable patterns of timber depletion over time in Brazil and other tropical countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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7. Patterns of plant phenology in Amazonian seasonally flooded and unflooded forests.
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Hawes, Joseph E. and Peres, Carlos A.
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PLANT phenology ,SWAMPS ,ECOSYSTEMS ,FLOODPLAIN forests ,SEED dispersal - Abstract
Copyright of Biotropica is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Hydropower and the future of Amazonian biodiversity.
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Lees, Alexander, Peres, Carlos, Fearnside, Philip, Schneider, Maurício, and Zuanon, Jansen
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BIODIVERSITY ,WATER power ,DAM design & construction ,WATERSHEDS ,RENEWABLE energy sources - Abstract
In an effort to ensure energy independence and exploit mineral resources, the governments of Amazonian countries are embarking on a major dam building drive on the basin's rivers, with 191 dams finished and a further 246 planned or under construction. This rush to harvest the basin's vast renewable energy capacity has come without proper consideration of the likely negative environmental externalities on the world's most speciose freshwater and terrestrial biotas. Here we highlight the economic drivers for hydropower development and review the literature to summarise the impacts of dam building on Amazonian biodiversity. We identify both direct and indirect impacts through the anticipated loss, fragmentation and degradation of riparian habitats. We then propose a series of measures to assess, curb and mitigate the impacts of destructive dams on Amazonian biodiversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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9. Dispersal limitation induces long-term biomass collapse in overhunted Amazonian forests.
- Author
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Peres, Carlos A., Emilio, Thaise, Schietti, Juliana, Desmoulière, Sylvain J. M., and Levi, Taal
- Subjects
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TROPICAL forests , *FOREST biodiversity , *FOREST management , *FOREST biomass , *DEFORESTATION - Abstract
Tropical forests are the global cornerstone of biological diversity, and store 55% of the forest carbon stock globally, yet sustained provisioning of these forest ecosystem services may be threatened by hunting-induced extinctions of plant-animal mutualisms that maintain long-term forest dynamics. Large-bodied Atelinae primates and tapirs in particular offer nonredundant seed-dispersal services for many large-seeded Neotropical tree species, which on average have higher wood density than smaller-seeded and winddispersed trees. We used field data and models to project the spatial impact of hunting on large primates by ~1 million rural households throughout the Brazilian Amazon. We then used a unique baseline dataset on 2,345 1-ha tree plots arrayed across the Brazilian Amazon to model changes in aboveground forest biomass under different scenarios of hunting-induced large-bodied frugivore extirpation. We project that defaunation of the most harvest-sensitive species will lead to losses in aboveground biomass of between 2.5-5.8% on average, with some losses as high as 26.5-37.8%. These findings highlight an urgent need to manage the sustainability of game hunting in both protected and unprotected tropical forests, and place full biodiversity integrity, including populations of large frugivorous vertebrates, firmly in the agenda of reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD+) programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Upstream and downstream responses of fish assemblages to an eastern Amazonian hydroelectric dam.
- Author
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Sá‐Oliveira, Júlio C., Hawes, Joseph E., Isaac‐Nahum, Victoria J., and Peres, Carlos A.
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FISH habitats ,WATER power ,SOCIAL impact assessment ,DAMS ,ENVIRONMENTAL monitoring - Abstract
Major hydroelectric dams are proliferating in tropical regions such as Amazonia, where extensive new hydropower developments are planned despite potentially severe ecological and social impacts. The status of freshwater biota in the vicinity of existing dams could be valuable to predict the effects of such developments, but detailed ecological monitoring before and after dam construction is frequently lacking., In the absence of these data, we used a space-for-time replacement to compare a key component of the aquatic biota at upstream and downstream sites, with the latter more closely resembling river channel conditions prior to the dam. We assessed the fish assemblages upstream and downstream of the Coaracy Nunes Dam in Amapá, Brazil, the first ecological study at this site since this dam was constructed 42 years earlier. We used gillnets during eight bimonthly field campaigns, covering both wet and dry seasons, and sampled the ichthyofauna (1819 individuals, 81 species) at four sites: Downstream Channel, Reservoir, Upstream Lake and Upstream Channel., We found clear negative impacts on the abundance, biomass, species richness, alpha diversity and species dominance upstream of the dam. The physical subdivision of the river channel and the upstream channel conversion from lentic to lotic habitats were strongly associated with differences in the composition and structure of fish communities. Notable changes include an increased contribution of small-bodied fish in the reservoir and an absence of long-distance migrants upstream of the dam., Downstream channel habitats, in particular, retained their fish diversity with high conservation value typical of eastern Amazonia, yet these areas now face the threat of new hydropower development farther downstream. The long-term impacts on aquatic biodiversity highlighted in this study are especially relevant in the face of burgeoning new hydroelectricity development plans for rivers across lowland Amazonia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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- View/download PDF
11. Environmental Costs of Government-Sponsored Agrarian Settlements in Brazilian Amazonia.
- Author
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Schneider, Maurício and Peres, Carlos A.
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AGROPASTORAL systems , *HUMAN settlements , *COLONIZATION (Ecology) , *HINTERLAND , *DEFORESTATION - Abstract
Brazil has presided over the most comprehensive agrarian reform frontier colonization program on Earth, in which ~1.2 million settlers have been translocated by successive governments since the 1970’s, mostly into forested hinterlands of Brazilian Amazonia. These settlements encompass 5.3% of this ~5 million km2 region, but have contributed with 13.5% of all land conversion into agropastoral land uses. The Brazilian Federal Agrarian Agency (INCRA) has repeatedly claimed that deforestation in these areas largely predates the sanctioned arrival of new settlers. Here, we quantify rates of natural vegetation conversion across 1911 agrarian settlements allocated to 568 Amazonian counties and compare fire incidence and deforestation rates before and after the official occupation of settlements by migrant farmers. The timing and spatial distribution of deforestation and fires in our analysis provides irrefutable chronological and spatially explicit evidence of agropastoral conversion both inside and immediately outside agrarian settlements over the last decade. Deforestation rates are strongly related to local human population density and road access to regional markets. Agrarian settlements consistently accelerated rates of deforestation and fires, compared to neighboring areas outside settlements, but within the same counties. Relocated smallholders allocated to forest areas undoubtedly operate as pivotal agents of deforestation, and most of the forest clearance occurs in the aftermath of government-induced migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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12. Hunting in Ancient and Modern Amazonia: Rethinking Sustainability.
- Author
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Shepard Jr., Glenn H., Levi, Taal, Neves, Eduardo Góes, Peres, Carlos A., and Yu, Douglas W.
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HUNTING & the environment ,HUNTING ,INDIGENOUS peoples' hunting & fishing rights ,SUSTAINABILITY ,SOURCE-sink dynamics ,SUBSISTENCE hunting ,PARQUE Nacional del Manu (Peru) ,MATHEMATICAL models - Abstract
Copyright of American Anthropologist is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Cross-scale variation in the density and spatial distribution of an Amazonian non-timber forest resource.
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Newton, Peter, Peres, Carlos A., Desmoulière, Sylvain J.M., and Watkinson, Andrew R.
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FOREST density ,NON-timber forest products ,LANDSCAPES ,FOREST type groups ,PLANT extracts ,HARVESTING - Abstract
Abstract: Successful management of tropical forest resources depends upon an understanding of their patterns of density and spatial distribution, since these affect the potential for harvesting. The variation in these patterns across different spatial scales has rarely been explored. We assessed the extent to which different spatial scales are useful in understanding resource distribution, using the example of an economically-significant tropical tree genus, Copaifera, which is valued across Brazilian Amazonia for its medicinal oleoresin. We mapped the spatial distribution of Copaifera trees at three nested spatial scales: basin-wide (across Brazilian Amazonia), landscape (across two contiguous extractive reserves) and local (within a 100-ha plot). Using data from our own study and an Amazon-wide forest inventory (Projeto RADAMBRASIL), we quantified the population distribution, density and size structure at the genus and species level at all three scales, relating these to two environmental variables – forest type and elevation. Spatial statistics were used to further characterize the resource at the landscape and local levels. The distribution, density and adult population structure differed between species and forest types at all three spatial scales. Overall tree densities ranged from 0.37ha
–1 (basin-wide scale) to 1.13ha–1 (local scale) but varied between forest types, with várzea containing a Copaifera tree density just 43% of that in terra firme forest at the landscape scale. Spatial distribution analyses showed significant clumping of some species, especially C. multijuga which averaged 61m between neighbouring trees. We compare our cross-scale density estimates and discuss the relative merits of studying the distribution of non-timber forest products (NTFP) at more than one spatial scale. Our results have implications for the management and extraction of this important Amazonian forest resource. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]- Published
- 2012
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14. Spatial, Temporal, and Economic Constraints to the Commercial Extraction of a Non-timber Forest Product: Copaíba ( Copaifera spp.) Oleoresin in Amazonian Reserves.
- Author
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Newton, Peter, Watkinson, Andrew, and Peres, Carlos
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NON-timber forest products ,MINERAL industries ,OLEORESINS ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,FOREST degradation ,DEFORESTATION - Abstract
Copyright of Economic Botany is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Habitat Selection and Use of Space by Bald-Faced Sakis ( Pithecia irrorata) in Southwestern Amazonia: Lessons from a Multiyear, Multigroup Study.
- Author
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Palminteri, Suzanne and Peres, Carlos
- Subjects
- *
PITHECIA , *HABITATS , *FOREST type groups , *GUADUA , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Population density and distribution in tropical forest vertebrates are directly linked to patterns of use of space relative to habitat structure and composition. To examine how forest type may explain the ranging behavior and high variance in group density observed within the geographic range of bald-faced saki monkeys ( Pithecia irrorata), we monitored habitat use of 5 neighboring focal groups of this species in southwestern Amazonia over 3 yr. To test whether sakis are unflooded (terra firme) forest specialists, we compared home range (HR) use to the corresponding availability of 4 main forest types and quantified HR size and activity budgets as a function of forest type. HR size varied from 16 to 60 ha, and saki population density at this scale (12.5 ± 6.4 SD individuals/km) was more closely related to forest type than to group size. Although sakis were not obligate habitat specialists, groups clearly avoided bamboo forest and preferred terra firme forest. Terra firme forests were associated with small HRs, intensive use, high HR overlap, and territorial defense, all of which suggest that saki densities will be higher in areas dominated by terra firme forest where large patches of bamboo ( Guadua spp.) are absent. The increased desiccation and subsequent forest fires expected in this region from the combined impacts of climate change and human land use potentially threaten the long-term viability of old-growth terra firme forest specialists such as sakis. Regional-scale conservation efforts should ensure that extensive blocks of terra firme forest are protected in areas that remain relatively free of bamboo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Habitat patch and matrix effects on small-mammal persistence in Amazonian forest fragments.
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Santos-Filho, Manoel, Peres, Carlos, Silva, Dionei, and Sanaiotti, Tânia
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HABITATS ,PATCH dynamics ,ANIMAL species ,MARSUPIALS ,SPECIES diversity ,RODENTS - Abstract
Tropical forest mammal assemblages are widely affected by the twin effects of habitat loss and habitat fragmentation. We evaluated the effects of forest patch metrics, habitat structure, age of patch isolation, and landscape metrics on the species richness, abundance and composition of small mammals at 23 forest fragments (ranging in size from 43 to 7,035 ha) in a highly deforested 3,609-km landscape of southwestern Brazilian Amazonia. Using pitfall traps and both terrestrial and arboreal traplines of Sherman, Tomahawk and snap traps, we captured a total of 844 individuals over 34,900 trap-nights representing 26 species and 20 genera of small-mammals, including 13 rodent and 13 marsupial species. We also consider the effects of distance from forest edges on species occupancy and abundance. Overall small mammal abundance, species richness and species composition were primarily affected by the quality of the open-habitat matrix of cattle pastures, rather than by patch metrics such as fragment size. Ultimately, small mammal community structure was determined by a combination of both landscape- and patch-scale variables. Knowledge of the anthropogenic factors that govern small mammal community structure is of critical importance for managing the persistence of forest vertebrates in increasingly fragmented neotropical forest landscapes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Fruit Removal and Natural Seed Dispersal of the Brazil Nut Tree ( Bertholletia excelsa) in Central Amazonia, Brazil.
- Author
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Tuck Haugaasen, Joanne M., Haugaasen, Torbjørn, Peres, Carlos A., Gribel, Rogerio, and Wegge, Per
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BRAZIL nut ,FRUIT harvesting ,SEED dispersal ,RODENTS - Abstract
ABSTRACT Experimental approaches to study seed dispersal of the Brazil nut tree have hitherto relied on exposed seeds deposited on the forest floor. Here we use a new method to study the natural dispersal by large rodents such as agoutis; tracking experimentally manipulated and tagged fruits containing individually marked seeds. Fruit manipulation did not deter agoutis from handling fruits. We found that agoutis usually moved intact fruits away from their original location below the parent tree before either hiding them or gnawing through the pericarp to access the seeds inside. Most fruits were moved to distances of 15-30 m from their original position, but some fruits could be taken as far as 60 m. A large number of seeds extracted from manipulated fruits appeared to be eaten immediately. Only 27 out of 1740 experimental seeds were found buried in shallow caches, generally within 5 m of the opened fruit. Fruit removal distance accounted for a disproportionate amount of total seed movement and seeds in the current study were dispersed significantly farther than in a previous experiment using exposed seeds, suggesting that classic dispersal experiments of this character may severely underestimate seed dispersal distances. We therefore conclude that the new method provides a more realistic and accurate approach to investigate natural seed dispersal of Brazil nuts and that the removal of fruits from underneath parent trees before being opened is the key to the significantly increased distances at which seeds are dispersed. Abstract in Portuguese is available at . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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18. Spatial tools for modeling the sustainability of subsistence hunting in tropical forests.
- Author
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TAAL LEVI, SHEPARD JR., GLENN H., OHL-SCHACHERER, JULIA, WILMERS, CHRISTOPHER C., PERES, CARLOS A., and YU, DOUGLAS W.
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SUBSISTENCE hunting ,WILDLIFE utilization ,WILDLIFE management ,SUSTAINABILITY ,FOREST management - Abstract
The article describes various spatial tools for modeling the sustainability of subsistence hunting in tropical forests for the Amazon River Region. It investigates the effectiveness of several proposed sustainability approach which include the long-tern effect of a single settlement, multiple settlements with overlapping hunting zones, and temporal changes in human population size. It proves that the models accurately predict the spatial distribution of primate depletion.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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19. Using learning networks to understand complex systems: a case study of biological, geophysical and social research in the Amazon.
- Author
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Barlow, Jos, Ewers, Robert M., Anderson, Liana, Aragao, Luiz E. O. C., Baker, Tim R., Boyd, Emily, Feldpausch, Ted R., Gloor, Emanuel, Hall, Anthony, Malhi, Yadvinder, Milliken, William, Mulligan, Mark, Parry, Luke, Pennington, Toby, Peres, Carlos A., Phillips, Oliver L., Roman-Cuesta, Rosa Maria, Tobias, Joseph A., and Gardner, Toby A.
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BIOCOMPLEXITY ,BIOGEOGRAPHY ,SPATIO-temporal variation ,LANDSCAPE ecology ,CASE studies ,BIODIVERSITY ,VEGETATION dynamics - Abstract
Developing high-quality scientific research will be most effective if research communities with diverse skills and interests are able to share information and knowledge, are aware of the major challenges across disciplines, and can exploit economies of scale to provide robust answers and better inform policy. We evaluate opportunities and challenges facing the development of a more interactive research environment by developing an interdisciplinary synthesis of research on a single geographic region. We focus on the Amazon as it is of enormous regional and global environmental importance and faces a highly uncertain future. To take stock of existing knowledge and provide a framework for analysis we present a set of mini-reviews from fourteen different areas of research, encompassing taxonomy, biodiversity, biogeography, vegetation dynamics, landscape ecology, earth-atmosphere interactions, ecosystem processes, fire, deforestation dynamics, hydrology, hunting, conservation planning, livelihoods, and payments for ecosystem services. Each review highlights the current state of knowledge and identifies research priorities, including major challenges and opportunities. We show that while substantial progress is being made across many areas of scientific research, our understanding of specific issues is often dependent on knowledge from other disciplines. Accelerating the acquisition of reliable and contextualized knowledge about the fate of complex pristine and modified ecosystems is partly dependent on our ability to exploit economies of scale in shared resources and technical expertise, recognise and make explicit interconnections and feedbacks among sub-disciplines, increase the temporal and spatial scale of existing studies, and improve the dissemination of scientific findings to policy makers and society at large. Enhancing interaction among research efforts is vital if we are to make the most of limited funds and overcome the challenges posed by addressing large-scale interdisciplinary questions. Bringing together a diverse scientific community with a single geographic focus can help increase awareness of research questions both within and among disciplines, and reveal the opportunities that may exist for advancing acquisition of reliable knowledge. This approach could be useful for a variety of globally important scientific questions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Rural–urban migration brings conservation threats and opportunities to Amazonian watersheds.
- Author
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Parry, Luke, Peres, Carlos A., Day, Brett, and Amaral, Silvana
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- *
WATERSHEDS , *HUMAN settlements , *RURAL population , *FOREST conservation - Abstract
The spatial distribution and growth of human populations have been overlooked by current debates concerning the impact of rural–urban migration for forest conservation in tropical countries. We investigated human settlement and population change in the Brazilian Amazon, combining government census data with field surveys along rivers. Rural populations were clustered and growing within 300 km of urban centers, whereas depopulation and land abandonment dominated farther from towns. The permanently inhabited extent of rivers contracted by 33 ± 8 SE% in recent decades, and households farther upriver were more likely to be considering rural–urban migration. However, harvesting of aquatic and terrestrial wildlife by nonresidents continued into headwater regions, hundreds of kilometers beyond the last household on any given river. Policy makers should consider that expanding cities may drive deforestation and overexploitation near towns while unclear property rights threatens overharvesting and unregulated land speculation in abandoned headwaters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Long-term persistence of midsized to large-bodied mammals in Amazonian landscapes under varying contexts of forest cover.
- Author
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Sampaio, Ricardo, Lima, Albertina, Magnusson, William, and Peres, Carlos
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WILDLIFE management ,FOREST restoration ,FOREST conservation ,FRAGMENTED landscapes ,FOREST conversion ,BIOLOGICAL extinction ,ECOLOGICAL heterogeneity ,HABITATS ,WILDLIFE habitat improvement - Abstract
Both forest fragmentation and overhunting have profound effects on the structure of large-vertebrate assemblages in neotropical forests. However, the long-term value of habitat fragments for forest mammals remains poorly understood and few regional scale studies have replicated sampling across spatially independent landscapes. Here, we assess the species occupancy and abundance of midsized to large-bodied mammals within three neighbouring Amazonian forest landscapes varying widely in extent of forest cover. One of these consisted of forest fragments surrounded by semi-natural scrub savannahs that had been occupied by paleoindian populations for at least 7,000 years, whereas forest cover in the other two landscapes was either variegated or continuous. Data on species occurrence and abundance from diurnal and nocturnal line-transect surveys and local interviews in each landscape were used to examine the effects of forest cover and hunting pressure on mammal persistence within forest patches. The extent of forest cover was a key determinant of species persistence across the three landscapes, but populations of large-bodied species were either reduced or driven to local extinction by hunting even in the most forested and least fragmented landscape. Many game and non-game species persisted in forest isolates, even though, individually, these were likely too small to support viable populations. This study indicates that even small, long-term forest fragments may retain significant conservation value if they can be managed within the context of enhanced connectivity across wider fragmented landscapes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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22. Habitat patch size modulates terrestrial mammal activity patterns in Amazonian forest fragments.
- Author
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NORRIS, DARREN, MICHALSKI, FERNANDA, and PERES, CARLOS A.
- Subjects
FORESTS & forestry ,ARMADILLOS ,OPOSSUMS ,FRAGMENTED landscapes ,HABITATS ,ANIMAL behavior - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Mammalogy is the property of Oxford University Press / USA and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Modelling the long-term sustainability of indigenous hunting in Manu National Park, Peru: landscape-scale management implications for Amazonia.
- Author
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Levi, Taal, Shepard Jr, Glenn H., Ohl-Schacherer, Julia, Peres, Carlos A., and Yu, Douglas W.
- Subjects
MACHIGUENGA (South American people) ,HUNTING & the environment ,SPIDER monkeys ,SOURCE-sink dynamics ,SPATIAL ecology ,SUBSISTENCE hunting ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,PARQUE Nacional del Manu (Peru) - Abstract
1. Widespread hunting throughout Amazonia threatens the persistence of large primates and other vertebrates. Most studies have used models of limited validity and restricted spatial and temporal scales to assess the sustainability. 2. We use human-demographic, game-harvest and game-census data to parameterize a spatially explicit hunting model. We explore how population growth and spread, hunting technology and effort, and source–sink dynamics impact the density of black spider monkeys Ateles chamek over time and space in the rainforests of south-eastern Peru. 3. In all scenarios, spider monkey populations, which are vulnerable to hunting, persist in high numbers in much of Manu National Park over the next 50 years. Nonetheless, shotguns cause much more depletion than traditional bow hunting by Matsigenka (Machiguenga) indigenous people. 4. Maintenance of the current indigenous lifestyle (dispersed settlements, bow hunting) is unlikely to deplete spider monkeys and, by extension, other fauna, despite rapid human population growth. This helps explain why large, pre-Colombian human populations did not drive large primates to extinction. When guns are used, however, spider monkeys quickly become depleted around even small settlements, with depletion eventually reversing the short-term harvest advantage provided by shotgun hunting. Thus, our models show that when guns are used, limits on settlement numbers can reduce total depletion. 5. Synthesis and applications. Our framework lets us visualize the future effects of hunting, population growth, hunting technology and settlement spread in tropical forests. In Manu Park, the continued prohibition of firearms is important for ensuring long-term hunting sustainability. A complementary policy is to negotiate limits on new settlements in return for development aid in existing settlements. The advantage of the latter approach is that settlement numbers are more easily monitored than is hunting effort or technology. Similar policies could help to reduce landscape-scale depletion of prey species in human-occupied reserves and protected areas throughout the Amazon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Conservation Value of Remnant Riparian Forest Corridors of Varying Quality for Amazonian Birds and Mammals.
- Author
-
LEES, ALEXANDER C. and PERES, CARLOS A.
- Subjects
- *
RIPARIAN forests , *BUFFER zones (Ecosystem management) , *FRAGMENTED landscapes , *BIRDS , *MAMMALS , *CORRIDORS (Ecology) , *RIPARIAN restoration , *LIVESTOCK systems - Abstract
Forest corridors are often considered the main instrument with which to offset the effects of habitat loss and fragmentation. Brazilian forestry legislation requires that all riparian zones on private landholdings be maintained as permanent reserves and sets fixed minimum widths of riparian forest buffers to be retained alongside rivers and perennial streams. We investigated the effects of corridor width and degradation status of 37 riparian forest sites (including 24 corridors connected to large source-forest patches, 8 unconnected forest corridors, and 5 control riparian zones embedded within continuous forest patches) on bird and mammal species richness in a hyper-fragmented forest landscape surrounding Alta Floresta, Mato Grosso, Brazil. We used point-count and track-sampling methodology, coupled with an intensive forest-quality assessment that combined satellite imagery and ground truthed data. Vertebrate use of corridors was highly species-specific, but broad trends emerged depending on species life histories and their sensitivity to disturbance. Narrow and/or highly disturbed riparian corridors retained only a depauperate vertebrate assemblage that was typical of deforested habitats, whereas wide, well-preserved corridors retained a nearly complete species assemblage. Restriction of livestock movement along riparian buffers and their exclusion from key areas alongside deforested streams would permit corridor regeneration and facilitate restoration of connectivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Vertebrate responses to fruit production in Amazonian flooded and unflooded forests.
- Author
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Haugaasen, Torbjørn and Peres, Carlos A.
- Subjects
VERTEBRATES ,HABITATS ,PREDATORY animals ,FRUIT ,RAIN forests ,FORESTS & forestry -- Environmental conditions - Abstract
We document patterns of fruit and vertebrate abundance within an extensive, virtually undisturbed mosaic of seasonally flooded (várzea and igapó) and unflooded (terra firme) forests of central Amazonia. Using phenological surveys and a standardised series of line-transect censuses we investigate the spatial and temporal patterns of immature and mature fruit availability and how this may affect patterns of habitat use by vertebrates in the landscape. All habitats showed marked peaks in fruiting activity, and vertebrate detection rates varied over time for most species both within and between forest types. Many arboreal and terrestrial vertebrates used both types of flooded forest on a seasonal basis, and fluctuations in the abundance of terrestrial species in várzea forest were correlated with fruit availability. Similarly, the abundance of arboreal seed predators such as buffy saki monkeys (Pithecia albicans) and macaws (Ara spp.) were closely linked with immature fruit availability in terra firme forest. We conclude that highly heterogeneous landscapes consisting of terra firme, várzea and igapóforest appear to play an important role in the dynamics of many vertebrate species in lowland Amazonia, but the extent to which different forest types are used is highly variable in both space and time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Disturbance-Mediated Mammal Persistence and Abundance-Area Relationships in Amazonian Forest Fragments.
- Author
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MICHALSKI, FERNANDA and PERES, CARLOS A.
- Subjects
- *
ANIMAL populations , *RAIN forest conservation , *MAMMALOGICAL research , *SPECIES diversity - Abstract
Few researchers have investigated the synergistic effects of tropical forest fragmentation and disturbance on species persistence and abundance. We examined effects of both forest-patch metrics and forest disturbance in determining richness and abundance of midsized to large-bodied mammal species in a highly fragmented Amazonian forest landscape. Twenty-one forest fragments, ranging from 2 to 14,480 ha, and two continuous forest sites were sampled based on sightings, tracks, line-transect censuses, armadillo burrow censuses, and camera trapping. Patch occupancy of 37 species recorded ranged from 4% to all forest sites surveyed. Forest fragment size was the strongest predictor of species persistence, explaining 90% of the variation in species richness. Information-theoretic analysis confirmed that fragment area was the most important explanatory variable for the overall species richness and abundance of mammal species, followed by surface fires, which affected the abundance of seven species. Large mammal species were typically absent from fragments <100 ha, whereas some ubiquitous species were favored by fragmentation, exhibiting hyperabundance in small patches. Our findings highlight the importance of large (>10,000 ha), relatively undisturbed forest patches to maximize persistence and maintain baseline abundances of Neotropical forest mammal species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Disturbance-Mediated Drift in Tree Functional Groups in Amazonian Forest Fragments.
- Author
-
Michalski, Fernanda, Nishi, Ivone, and Peres, Carlos A.
- Subjects
TREES ,TIMBER ,FOREST ecology ,RAIN forest ecology ,FORESTS & forestry - Abstract
Copyright of Biotropica is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Impact of game hunting by the Kayapó of south-eastern Amazonia: implications for wildlife conservation in tropical forest indigenous reserves.
- Author
-
Peres, Carlos A. and Nascimento, Hilton S.
- Subjects
NATURAL resources management ,CONSERVATION of natural resources ,FOREST conservation ,WILDLIFE conservation ,FOREST reserves ,POPULATION geography ,DEMOGRAPHIC surveys ,HUNTING - Abstract
Indigenous forest reserves represent approximately one fifth of Brazilian Amazonia and pose enormous challenges for sustainable natural resource management by native Amazonians. In collaboration with the Kayapó Indians of A'Ukre of southeastern Amazonia, we obtained a game harvest profile of over 1360 forest vertebrates consumed at this village over a 20-month period, including 743 mammals, 361 forest tortoises and 256 birds from a minimum of 42 game species. This amounted to a total of 13,775 kg of game animals harvested over the entire study (mean = 26.2 kg d
-1 ). We also obtained some 450 km of line transect census data of midsized to large-bodied vertebrates within the core hunting catchment of this village and in an unhunted but otherwise comparable site upriver of A'Ukre. Population density estimates of 16 of the 18 species censused were significantly depressed by hunting by central place foragers within the village catchment, and a number of harvest-sensitive prey species showed clear evidence of local depletion. For the time being, however, we can conclude that hunting was sustainable at the landscape scale largely because source-sink dynamics in the context of low village catchment density is made possible by large surrounding tracts of primary forest that remain unharvested or underharvested. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Tree Phenology in Adjacent Amazonian Flooded and Unflooded Forests.
- Author
-
Haugaasen, Torbjørn and Peres, Carlos A.
- Subjects
PLANT phenology ,TREES ,FORESTS & forestry ,PLANT reproduction - Abstract
Copyright of Biotropica is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Primate assemblage structure in amazonian flooded and unflooded forests.
- Author
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Haugaasen, Torbjørn and Peres, Carlos A.
- Subjects
- *
PRIMATES , *FORESTS & forestry , *CAPUCHIN monkeys , *FLOODPLAIN forests , *SQUIRREL monkeys - Abstract
There is considerable variation in primate species richness across neotropical forest sites, and the richest assemblages are found in western Amazonia. Forest type is an important determinant of the patterns of platyrrhine primate diversity, abundance, and biomass. Here we present data on the assemblage structure of primates in adjacent unflooded (terra firme) and seasonally inundated (várzea and igapó) forests in the lower Purús region of central-western Brazilian Amazonia. A line-transect census of 2,026 km in terra firme, 2,309 km in várzea, and 277 km in igapó was conducted. Twelve primate species were recorded from 2,059 primate group sightings. Although terra firme was found to be consistently more species-rich than várzea, the aggregate primate density in terra firme forest was considerably lower than that in the species-poor várzea. Consequently, the total biomass estimate was much higher in várzea compared to either terra firme or igapó forest. Brown capuchin monkeys (Cebus apella) were the most abundant species in terra firme, but were outnumbered by squirrel monkeys (Saimiri cf. ustus) in the várzea. The results suggest that floodplain forest is a crucial complement to terra firme in terms of primate conservation in Amazonian forests. Am. J. Primatol. 67:243–258, 2005. © 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Why We Need Megareserves in Amazonia.
- Author
-
PERES, CARLOS A.
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL protected areas systems , *PROTECTED areas , *PLANNING , *SPECIES distribution , *FOREST reserves - Abstract
Brazilian Amazonia faces one of the greatest threats and opportunities for tropical biodiversity conservation of our times. I consider several large-scale issues in biodiversity conservation planning (e.g., resource extraction, large areas needed for top predators, species migration, fire, and carbon sequestration) in light of our severely deficient understanding of basinwide patterns of species distribution and little-known Amazonian biota. The long-term persistence of this biota is best served by strictly protected and sustainable development forest reserves that are both embedded in a benign forest matrix and sufficiently large to support a full complement of species and landscape-scale ecological processes. Given rapidly accelerating trends in agricultural frontier expansion into previously unclaimed public lands, protection and controlled development of forests is urgent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Synergistic Effects of Subsistence Hunting and Habitat Fragmentation on Amazonian Forest Vertebrates.
- Author
-
Peres, Carlos A.
- Subjects
- *
BIG game hunting , *FRAGMENTED landscapes , *VERTEBRATES , *ANIMAL populations - Abstract
Abstract: Subsistence game hunting has profound negative effects on the species diversity, standing biomass, and size structure of vertebrate assemblages in Amazonian forests that otherwise remain largely undisturbed. These effects are likely to be considerably aggravated by forest fragmentation because fragments are more accessible to hunters, allow no (or very low rates of ) recolonization from nonharvested source populations, and may provide a lower-quality resource base for the frugivore-granivore vertebrate fauna. I examined the likelihood of midsized to large-bodied bird and mammal populations persisting in Amazonian forest fragments of variable sizes whenever they continue to be harvested by subsistence hunters in the aftermath of isolation. I used data from a comprehensive compilation of game-harvest studies throughout Neotropical forests to estimate the degree to which different species and populations have been overharvested and then calculated the range of minimum forest areas required to maintain a sustainable harvest. The size distribution of 5564 Amazonian forest fragments—estimated from Landsat images of six regions of southern and eastern Brazilian Amazonia—clearly shows that these are predominantly small and rarely exceed 10 ha, suggesting that persistent overhunting is likely to drive most midsized to large vertebrate populations to local extinction in fragmented forest landscapes. Although experimental studies on this negative synergism remain largely unavailable, the prospect that increasingly fragmented Neotropical forest regions can retain their full assemblages of avian and mammalian species is unlikely. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Perils in Parks or Parks in Peril? Reconciling Conservation in Amazonian Reserves with and without Use.
- Author
-
Peres, Carlos A. and Zimmerman, Barbara
- Subjects
- *
FOREST reserves , *FOREST conservation , *BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
Comments on whether human presence is incompatible with the conservation of biological diversity in the Amazonian forest reserves. Opportunities for redesigning and consolidating protected reserves; Strategies in securing the region's forest cover; Effectiveness of indigenous communities in managing forests in the region.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Effects of Subsistence Hunting on Vertebrate Community Structure in Amazonian Forests.
- Author
-
Peres, Carlos A.
- Subjects
- *
HUNTING & the environment , *GAME & game-birds , *FOREST ecology - Abstract
Subsistence hunting affects vast tracts of tropical wilderness that otherwise remain structurally unaltered, yet distinguishing hunted from nonhunted tropical forests presents a difficult problem because this diffuse form of resource extraction leaves few visible signs of its occurrence. I used a standardized series of line-transect censuses conducted over a 10-year period to examine the effects of subsistence game harvest on the structure of vertebrate communities in 25 Amazonian forest sites subjected to varying levels of hunting pressure. Crude vertebrate biomass, which was highly correlated with hunting pressure, gradually declined from nearly 1200 kg km-2 at nonhunted sites to less than 200 kg km-2 at heavily hunted sites. Hunting had a negative effect on the total biomass and relative abundance of vertebrate species in different size classes at these forest sites, but it did not affect their overall density. In particular, persistent hunting markedly reduced the density of large-bodied game species (>5 kg), which contributed a large proportion of the overall community biomass at nonhunted sites (65–78%) and lightly hunted sites (55–71%). Nutrient-rich floodplain forests contained a consistently greater game biomass than nutrient-poor unflooded forests, once I controlled for the effects of hunting pressure. Conservative estimates of game yields indicate that as many as 23.5 million game vertebrates, equivalent to 89,224 tons of bushmeat with a market value of US$190.7 million, are consumed each year by the rural population of Brazilian Amazonia, which illustrates the enormous socioeconomic value of game resources in the region. My cross-site comparison documents the staggering effect of subsistence hunters on tropical forest vertebrate communities and highlights the importance of considering forest types and forest productivity in game management programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Harpy Eagle (Harpia harpyja) nest tree selection: Selective logging in Amazon forest threatens Earth's largest eagle.
- Author
-
Miranda, Everton B.P., Peres, Carlos A., Marini, Miguel Ângelo, and Downs, Colleen T.
- Subjects
- *
BIRD nests , *WILDLIFE conservation , *FOREST canopies , *NESTS , *LOGGING , *EAGLES - Abstract
Characterizing wildlife conservation problems is essential to properly inform conservation planning, and requires detailed knowledge on critical life stages, such as reproduction. Large tropical raptors often require large emergent trees to build their huge nests. However, large emergents are also in heavy demand by the timber industry. Here, we review the literature to characterize nesting structures used by Earth's largest eagle, Harpy Eagles (Harpia harpyja) and examine to what extent nest-tree selectivity is targeted by selective logging. We show that Harpy Eagles selected specific forest canopy structures as nesting platforms. Nests were large (mean size 152 × 99 cm) and typically located on the main fork of 28 emergent tree species, 92.8% of which are commercially targeted by the timber industry. AIC-based stepwise regression indicated that, compared with non-nesting emergent trees, nest trees were 19.6% taller at the first bifurcation; had crowns 26.6% wider; had 33.3% fewer branches <45°, which were on average 35% lower-angled. Tree size varied widely across the range of nesting tree species, but peaked near the Equator, and were high-statured in unflooded forest compared with flooded forests. Our results show that commercial loggers target the same set of species and individuals on which Harpy Eagles nest, questioning whether large tracts of selectively logged Amazonian primary forests still provide suitable nesting habitat for this mega-raptor. We conclude that suitable Harpy Eagle nesting trees have been rapidly lost over the species last stronghold, and this information may prove useful to the upcoming species evaluation by IUCN. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Demographic Threats to the Sustainability of Brazil NutExploitation.
- Author
-
Peres, Carlos A., Balder, Claudia, Zuidema, Pieter A., Wadt, Lucia H. O., Kainer, Karen A., Comes-Silva, Daisy A. P., Salomão,, Rafael P., Simões, Luciana L., Franciosi, Eduardo R. N., Valverde, Fernando Cornejo, Gribel, Rogério, Shepard Jr., Glenn H., Kanashiro, Milton, Coventry, Peter, Yu, Douglas W., Watkinson., Andrew R., and Freckleton, Robert P.
- Subjects
- *
NUT trees , *CASHEW tree , *HARVESTING - Abstract
A comparative analysis of 23 populations of the Brazil nut tree (Bertholletia excelsa) across the Brazilian, Peruvian, and Bolivian Amazon shows that the history and intensity of Brazil nut exploitation are major determinants of population size structure. Populations subjected to persistent levels of harvest lack juvenile trees less than 60 centimeters in diameter at breast height; only populations with a history of either light or recent exploitation contain large numbers of juvenile trees. A harvesting model confirms that intensive exploitation levels over the past century are such that juvenile recruitment is insufficient to maintain populations over the long term. Without management, intensively harvested populations will succumb to a process of senescence and demographic collapse, threatening this cornerstone of the Amazonian extractive economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Rapid recovery of thermal environment after selective logging in the Amazon.
- Author
-
Mollinari, Manoela M., Peres, Carlos A., and Edwards, David P.
- Subjects
- *
FOREST management , *TROPICAL forests , *FOREST canopy gaps , *CLIMATE change , *EARTH temperature , *LOGGING , *IMPACT craters - Abstract
• Thermal environment recovery after selective logging in the Amazon is investigated. • Temperatures in logging gaps return to unlogged forest levels after five years. • Ground surface shows more extreme temperatures than understorey ambient air. • Microclimate availability is impaired in recent gaps especially in peak day hours. Selective logging is one of the most widespread pattern of disturbance in tropical forests but has a much lower detrimental impact on forest structure than wildfires and conversion to farmland. Thus, logged tropical forest represents critical strongholds of global biodiversity. The ability of these forests to rapidly recover their baseline thermal environmental conditions will markedly influence their conservation value, particularly under global climate change. We investigated the impacts of commercial selective logging on the forest thermal environment in the Brazilian Amazon by relating canopy disturbance from logging to ambient understorey and ground surface temperatures. Specifically, we assessed the impact of selective logging on the forest thermal heterogeneity; how much post-harvest time is required for the thermal environment of logging gaps and logging roads return to unlogged primary forest levels; and the spatial availability of surface microclimates considering time of recovery since logging. Logging gaps following 1 year of recovery had a hotter understorey ambient than all other environments, especially during peak midday temperatures. Compared to the unlogged understorey, logging gaps after 3 years of recovery were only marginally warmer, and logging gaps after 5 years of recovery were slightly cooler. Older wide roads (5 years; 6 m) experienced very similar understorey thermal conditions than both narrow roads (3 m) after 1-5 years of recovery, and unlogged forest. Ground surface temperatures exhibited the largest discrepancies among all environments. The temperature range spanned by surface microclimates notably increased during peak midday heat in logging gaps following 1 year of recovery. Additionally, the proportion of cool area was smaller in younger logging gaps, but the average size of cool patches and their spatial aggregation was similar to that in unlogged forest. Although commercial selective logging can severely damage tropical forest structure, we found that the forest can fairly rapidly regain its thermal environment. Post-logging forest management should carefully focus on preventing fire incursions and illegal activities with special attention to those 3-5 years post-harvest. Thermal homeostasis in selectively logged tropical forests can be vital for long-term maintenance of global biodiversity under contemporary scenarios of climate change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Brazil’s indigenous lands under threat.
- Author
-
Begotti, Rodrigo Anzolin and Peres, Carlos A.
- Subjects
- *
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,INDIGENOUS peoples of Brazil - Published
- 2019
39. A multi-taxa assessment of nestedness patterns across a multiple-use Amazonian forest landscape
- Author
-
Louzada, Julio, Gardner, Toby, Peres, Carlos, and Barlow, Jos
- Subjects
- *
BIODIVERSITY , *FORESTS & forestry , *TREES , *EUCALYPTUS , *LANDSCAPES , *PLANT species , *PLANT classification - Abstract
Abstract: Understanding how biodiversity is partitioned among alternative land-uses is an important first step for developing effective conservation plans in multiple-use landscapes. Here, we analysed nestedness patterns of species composition for nine different taxonomic groups [dung beetles, fruit-feeding butterflies, orchid bees, scavenger flies, leaf-litter amphibians, lizards, bats, birds and woody plants (trees and lianas)] in a multiple-use forestry landscape in the Brazilian Amazon containing primary, secondary and Eucalyptus plantation forests. A formal nestedness analysis was performed to investigate whether species-poor land-uses were comprised of a subset of species from more diverse forests, and the extent to which this pattern varied among taxa. At the landscape-scale the species-by-sites matrices were significantly nested for all nine taxonomic groups when both sites and species were sorted to maximally pack the species/occurrence matrix and, except for orchid bees when sorted by land-use intensity (primary forest to Eucalyptus plantation). Different patterns emerged when we conducted pairwise analyses of nestedness between the three forest types: (a) most of the taxonomic groups were nested in accordance with increased land-use intensity; (b) neither orchid bees nor leaf-litter amphibians from secondary forest made up a significant nested subset of primary forest species, although species found in Eucalyptus plantation sites were nested within secondary forest communities; and (c) lizards from Eucalyptus plantations were not a nested subset of either primary or secondary forest. Our findings emphasize the complex nature of patterns of species occupancy in tropical multiple-use forestry landscapes, and illustrate that there may be no easy solutions to questions regarding the conservation value of secondary and exotic plantation forests. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Effects of ground fires on understorey bird assemblages in Amazonian forests
- Author
-
Barlow, Jos, Haugaasen, Tor, and Peres, Carlos A.
- Subjects
- *
HABITATS , *WILDFIRES , *BIRDS - Abstract
Avifaunal responses to understorey fire disturbance and subsequent changes in habitat structure were examined within 20 burnt and unburnt forest plots of 0.25 ha (10×250 m), 10–15 months after an unprecedented understorey fire swept through the Tapajo´s-Arapiuns Extractive Reserve of central Brazilian Amazonia following the severe 1997–1998 El-Nin˜o dry season. Although these surface fires in the previously undisturbed primary forest were relatively mild, they resulted in dramatic changes in forest structure consistent with those found elsewhere in Amazonia. Bird species negatively affected by these changes tended to be the least common, the most disturbance-sensitive, and habitat specialists. Considering different guilds, ant followers, dead-leaf gleaners, terrestrial gleaners, and arboreal sallying insectivores were the most negatively affected, whereas nectivores and arboreal granivores became more abundant in the burnt forest. The results highlight the severe consequences of even relatively mild surface fires in neotropical forests, and the importance of controlling haphazard frontier expansion for the conservation of susceptible species that are endemic to fire-prone regions. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The mysterious white deer: anomalous coloring in different Neotropical deer.
- Author
-
Guastalla, Michelle Granato, de Azevedo, Fernanda Cavalcanti, Vogliotti, Alexandre, Lacerda, Wagner Rafael, Magina, Giulius Cesare, Cardoso, Clarice Augusta Carvalho, Endo, Whaldener, Peres, Carlos Augusto, Haugaasen, Torbjørn, Rocha, Daniel Gomes, and Lemos, Frederico Gemesio
- Subjects
- *
ZOOLOGICAL surveys , *RAIN forests , *ANIMAL coloration , *MELANISM , *DEER - Abstract
Animal coloring serves several functions, including camouflage and thermoregulation. However, some individuals have anomalous coloring patterns due to excess (melanism) or deficiency (albinism, leucism, or piebaldism) in melanin production. Although these anomalies occur in several species, there are few cited cases. Here, we report the occurrence of color anomalies in three Neotropical deer species. Data were obtained from wildlife inventories, through direct observation, camera-traps, and/or deer carcasses, between 2011 and 2020, in three biomes—the Brazilian Savanna (Cerrado), and the Atlantic and Amazon Rain Forests. We registered 10 individuals with anomalous coloring from Minas Gerais, São Paulo, Amazonas and Rondônia states; seven Mazama gouazoubira (six piebalds and one leucistic), two piebald M. americana, and one piebald M. nemorivaga. Of the registered individuals, five were males, two females, and three of undetermined sex. To our knowledge, this is the largest set of anomalous coloring data for Neotropical deer. Even with the increasing reports of anomalous coloring, little is known about the factors that may cause this and how it influences the survival of individuals and consequently wild populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. The value of primary, secondary and plantation forests for Amazonian birds
- Author
-
Barlow, Jos, Mestre, Luiz A.M., Gardner, Toby A., and Peres, Carlos A.
- Subjects
- *
BIRD conservation , *PLANTATIONS , *HABITATS , *REFORESTATION , *EUCALYPTUS , *LAND use , *TREE planting , *BIODIVERSITY - Abstract
Secondary forests and exotic tree plantations are rapidly expanding across tropical landscapes, yet we currently have a very poor understanding of the value of these human-dominated forest landscapes for biodiversity conservation. Mist netting, point counts and transect walks were used to compare the bird communities of these habitats and neighboring primary forest in north-east Brazilian Amazonia. The extensive spatial scale of plantations and second-growth in our study area enabled us to implement a robust replicated design, with survey plots approximately two to three orders of magnitude larger than most previous studies of land-use change in the tropics, thus minimising the influence of the surrounding landscape. Species richness was highest in primary forest and lowest in Eucalyptus plantations, and community turnover between habitats was very high whether based upon matrices of relative abundance or species presence–absence data, and for both point count and mist net data. Monthly line-transect censuses conducted over an annual cycle showed an increase in the detection of canopy frugivores and seed predators during the peak of flower and fruit availability in primary forest, but failed to suggest that second-growth or Eucalyptus stands provide suitable foraging habitat at any time of the year. The conservation value of both secondary forest and plantations was low compared to conclusions from previous studies. Our results indicate that while large-scale reforestation of degraded land can increase regional levels of diversity, it is unlikely to conserve most primary forest species, such as understorey insectivores and canopy frugivores. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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