42 results on '"Manu National Park"'
Search Results
2. Aenigmanu, a new genus of Picramniaceae from Western Amazonia.
- Author
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Thomas, William Wayt, Hensold, Nancy, Foster, Robin, Ree, Richard H., and Soares Neto, Raimundo Luciano
- Subjects
MAXIMUM likelihood statistics ,BAYESIAN field theory ,NATIONAL parks & reserves - Abstract
An unusual tree was collected in the Manu National Park in Peru in 1973 and although recollected many times, remained unidentified for decades. Preliminary molecular analysis indicated that it belonged to the Picramniaceae, even though the vegetative features were discordant. Using the nuclear marker ITS and the chloroplast marker rbcL, sequences were analyzed using Bayesian inference and maximum likelihood methods. The molecular analyses and study of the morphology showed that it is a new genus and species of Picramniaceae, herein described as Aenigmanu alvareziae. We provide a full morphological description, illustrations, and a distribution map of the new taxon, as well as a revised key to the genera of Picramniaceae. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Flesh-fy myiasis (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) in Dendropsophus schubarti (Anura: Hylidae) from Peru
- Author
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Karina Junes, Jorge Ruiz, and Eliana Quispitupac
- Subjects
amphibians ,Cocha Cashu ,Madre de Dios ,Manu National Park ,parasitoidism ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Published
- 2019
4. After the epizootic: Host–pathogen dynamics in montane tropical amphibian communities with high prevalence of chytridiomycosis.
- Author
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LaBumbard, Brandon, Shepack, Alexander, and Catenazzi, Alessandro
- Subjects
CLOUD forests ,AMPHIBIANS ,AMPHIBIAN diseases ,MYCOSES ,BATRACHOCHYTRIUM dendrobatidis - 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
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Nesting biology of Green-and-gold tanager (Tangara schrankii): unique traits for lowland reproductive success?
- Author
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Loaiza-Muñoz, Mario A. and Londoño, Gustavo A.
- Subjects
- *
BIOLOGICAL fitness , *TROPICAL forests , *NEST building , *BIRD nests , *NATURAL history , *BIOLOGY , *INCUBATION period (Communicable diseases) - Abstract
The Green-and-Gold Tanager (Tangara schrankii) is widely distributed throughout western Amazonia, between 300 and 1650 m, and is a common member of canopy and midstory mixed-species flocks. Although basic nesting aspects are known for this species, detailed information is lacking. This study provides new insights on nesting behaviour and natural history for this species based on 150 nests encountered during eight consecutive nesting seasons in southeastern Peru, Manu National Park. Nests were located between 0.3 and 4.5 m above the ground. The incubation and nestling periods lasted 16 and 13.4 days, respectively. Females conducted 6.2 ± 1.96 off-bouts per day and spent long incubating sessions of 77.4 ± 51.9 min. The length of the incubation bouts and the frequency (trips per day) did not vary across the three stages (early, middle, and late) of the incubation period. The overall daytime nest attentiveness was 65.4% and did not vary along the incubation period. Parents conducted 1.77 ± 1.02 feeding trips per hour. The daily survival rate (0.75) of this species was low compared to other passerines. Our data is consistent with previous T. schrankii nesting descriptions. Nestling period, and feeding rates, however, are much shorter compared to previous reports for other Tangara and related genera. We found that T. schrankii has different nesting strategies, such as locating nests on a variety of substrates, conducting long incubation sessions, fewer off-bouts, and lower feeding rates. These strategies could reduce nest detectability by visual predators, and shorten the nestling period, likely increasing their reproductive success. We suggest that the combination of these nesting traits has allowed T. schrankii to successfully inhabit lowland tropical forests where high predation levels are encountered by nesting birds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Patterns of territorial space use by Shining Sunbeams (Aglaeactis cupripennis), tropical montane hummingbirds.
- Author
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Pavan, Lucas I., Jankowski, Jill E., and Hazlehurst, Jenny A.
- Subjects
HUMMINGBIRDS ,RADIO telemetry ,MOUNTAIN forests ,FORAGING behavior ,HUMAN territoriality ,HABITAT selection ,MOUNTAIN ecology ,SPATIAL behavior - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Field Ornithology is the property of Resilience Alliance 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
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Nesting biology of the Spotted Nightingale-Thrush (Catharus dryas) and comparison of life histories in the genus Catharus.
- Author
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Tenorio, Elkin A. and Londoño, Gustavo A.
- Subjects
- *
ANIMAL clutches , *EGG incubation , *BIOLOGY , *LIFE history theory , *NATURAL history , *CLOUD forests , *FOREST reserves , *BIRD eggs - Abstract
Elucidating new reproductive traits and evaluating how they vary within and among species in a geographic context, is relevant to understanding the evolutionary processes underlying diversity in life-history strategies. In this study we describe the breeding biology of Catharus dryas in a Peruvian population, and compare life history traits with a subtropical population and other temperate Catharus thrushes to better understand intra and interspecific variations in nesting traits. We monitored 35 nests of C. dryas between 2008 and 2013 in an Andean cloud forest of the Manu National Park in Peru and conducted a literature review of the nesting biology of Catharus species. We provide new information on nest architecture, nestling growth rate, incubation behaviour, reproductive phenology and egg temperature. The intraspecific comparison with an Argentinian population showed that despite the 13° latitudinal differences, nesting characters were highly conserved. These include a clutch size of two eggs, and an incubation and nestling period of 14 days. Nest attendance differed slightly (60 and 67% in Peru and Argentina, respectively). The interspecific comparisons showed that tropical and temperate species followed respectively slow and fast reproductive strategies in most of the traits according to the life-history theory, but other such as average incubation time, nestling feeding rate, and some dimensions in the nest architecture were similar between C. dryas and the temperate species. Although detailed descriptions are needed for Catharus species, especially tropical species to conduct more robust comparisons, our results exemplify how intra and interspecific comparison based on natural history data can help to understand life-history evolution in a biogeographic context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The threat of road expansion in the Peruvian Amazon.
- Author
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Gallice, Geoffrey R., Larrea-Gallegos, Gustavo, and Vázquez-Rowe, Ian
- Subjects
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ROAD construction , *DEFORESTATION , *SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
The construction of roads and other large-scale infrastructure projects, and the secondary impacts they precipitate, are among the key drivers of change in tropical forests. The proposed expansion of a road in the buffer zones of Peru's Manu National Park and Amarakaeri Communal Reserve, in the country's Amazon region, threatens biodiversity and indigenous communities in one of the world's most species-rich and environmentally sensitive rainforest areas. In particular, road expansion is likely to result in uncontrolled colonization, deforestation, and the illicit extraction of timber and other natural resources, as well as an increase in social conflict between resource extractors and indigenous communities. Furthermore, the development of infrastructure in the Manu region puts at risk Peru's international commitments regarding climate change by promoting, rather than avoiding, forest loss. A number of viable alternatives to further road expansion are available to achieve economic development and improved mobility in Manu, including agricultural intensification, improved land-use planning, and a less invasive transportation infrastructure. Given the growth in the global road network expected in the coming decades, as well as the common factors underlying the expansion of such infrastructure across tropical, developing countries, the issues surrounding road expansion in Manu and the compromise solutions that we propose are broadly applicable to efforts to achieve sustainable development in other remote, tropical regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Combining multiple sources of data to uncover the natural history of an endemic Andean hummingbird, the Peruvian Piedtail (Phlogophilus harterti).
- Author
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David, Santiago, Jankowski, Jill E., and Londoño, Gustavo A.
- Subjects
HUMMINGBIRDS ,NEST building ,BIRD nests ,BIRD habitats ,NATURAL history ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Field Ornithology is the property of Resilience Alliance 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
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Impairment in Working Memory and Executive Function Associated with Mercury Exposure in Indigenous Populations in Upper Amazonian Peru
- Author
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Alycia K. Silman, Raveena Chhabria, George W. Hafzalla, Leahanne Giffin, Kimberly Kucharski, Katherine Myers, Carlos Culquichicón, Stephanie Montero, Andres G. Lescano, Claudia M. Vega, Luis E. Fernandez, Miles R. Silman, Michael J. Kane, and John W. Sanders
- Subjects
Matsigenka ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,methylmercury ,working memory ,executive functions ,indigenous population ,environmental exposure ,Manu National Park ,Amazon Basin ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Mercury ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Executive Function ,Memory, Short-Term ,Peru ,Animals ,Humans ,Indigenous Peoples - Abstract
The Matsigenka people living traditional lifestyles in remote areas of the Amazon rely on a fish-based diet that exposes them to methylmercury (MeHg) at levels that have been associated with decreased IQ scores. In this study, the association between Hg levels and working memory was explored using the framework of the Multicomponent Model. Working memory tasks were modified to fit the culture and language of the Matsigenka when needed and included measures for verbal storage (Word Span) visuospatial storage (Corsi Block Task) and a measure of executive functions, the Self-Ordered Pointing Task (SOPT). An innovation of the Trail Making Tests A & B (TMT A & B) was pilot tested as another potential measure of executive functions. The mean hair Hg levels of 30 participants, ages 12 to 55 years, from three different communities (Maizal, Cacaotal and Yomibato) was 7.0 ppm (sd = 2.40), well above the World Health Organization (WHO) limit for hair of 2.0 ppm and ranged from 1.8 to 14.2 ppm, with 98% of a broader sample of 152 individuals exceeding the WHO limit. Hair Hg levels showed significant associations with cognitive performance, but the degree varied in magnitude according to the type of task. Hg levels were negatively associated with executive functioning performance (SOPT errors), while Hg levels and years of education predicted visuospatial performance (Corsi Block accuracy). Education was the only predictor of Word Span accuracy. The results show that Hg exposure is negatively associated with working memory performance when there is an increased reliance on executive functioning. Based on our findings and the review of the experimental research, we suggest that the SOPT and the Corsi Block have the potential to be alternatives to general intelligence tests when studying remote groups with extensive cultural differences.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Minimum longevity estimates for some Neotropical landbirds of southeastern Peru.
- Author
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Scholer, Micah N., Merkord, Christopher L., Londoño, Gustavo A., and Jankowski, Jill E.
- Subjects
- *
BIRD banding , *LIFE history theory , *PASSERIFORMES , *WARBLERS - Abstract
Relatively little is known about the longevity of free-living landbirds, especially in the tropics. We used mark-recapture data for birds originally banded in 2005 and 2006, and later recaptured between 2011 and 2016, to estimate minimum longevity for 20 species from southeastern Peru. The oldest recorded longevity was 10 years, 6 months for a Black-billed Treehunter (Thripadectes melanorhynchus). Another notable record was for a Russet-crowned Warbler (Myiothlypis coronata; 9 years, 2 months). Our estimated minimum longevity records generally reflect the findings of other researchers, indicating that tropical birds are often markedly site faithful and long-lived. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. El Parque Nacional del Manu, los pueblos indígenas y sus derechos
- Author
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García Altamirano, Alfredo
- Subjects
indigenous rights ,derechos indígenas ,national parks ,Áreas naturales protegidas ,Parque Nacional del Manu ,parques nacionales ,indigenous people ,Manu National Park ,pueblos indígenas ,Protected areas - Abstract
Based on the analysis of the Manu National Park (PNM) case, this article examines the current situation of the rights of indigenous peoples within national parks in the country. The aim is to update this issue by examining its situation within national parks, the highest category of protection of biological diversity of the National System of Protected Natural Areas of Peru (SINANPE)., El presente artículo examina la situación actual de los derechos de los pueblos indígenas dentro de los parques nacionales en el país, a partir del análisis del caso del Parque Nacional del Manu (PNM). Se trata de poner al día este tema examinando su situación al interior de los parques nacionales, la categoría más elevada de protección de diversidad biológica del conjunto de categorías del Sistema Nacional de Áreas Naturales Protegidas del Perú (SINANPE).
- Published
- 2021
13. Efecto distancia en la disposición a pagar por la conservación de la biodiversidad: el caso de un área protegida megadiversa
- Author
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Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico, Tecnológico y de Innovación Tecnológica, Perú, Orihuela Romero, Carlos Enrique, Minaya, Carlos Alberto, Mercado, Waldemar, Jiménez, Luis Alberto, Estrada, Milagros, Gómez, Harriet Jazmine, Mercado, Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico, Tecnológico y de Innovación Tecnológica, Perú, Orihuela Romero, Carlos Enrique, Minaya, Carlos Alberto, Mercado, Waldemar, Jiménez, Luis Alberto, Estrada, Milagros, Gómez, Harriet Jazmine, and Mercado
- Abstract
[ES] Este estudio aborda el caso del Parque Nacional Manu (PNM) en Perú, una de las áreas más megadiversas del mundo. Aplicando el método experimentos de elección (EE), en base a 1.164 encuestas en este país, se determinó que el efecto distancia es positivo en la disposición a pagar (DAP) para la conserva-ción de biodiversidad del PNM, al menos para la mayor parte de los atributos analizados. Esto evidencia que en áreas megadiversas, la DAP puede no estar inversamente relacionada con la distancia del entrevistado ya que el efecto del interés por conservación de biodiversidad superaría al desinterés asociado a la distancia., [EN] This research addresses the case of Manu National Park (PNM) in Peru, one of the most biodiverse protected areas worldwide. Applying the choice experiments (CE) method, based on 1.164 surveys in this country, the positive decay effect on the willingness to pay (WTP) was determined for the conservation of the PNM, at least for most of the attributes analyzed. This suggests that in cases of megadiverse areas, WTP for conservation may not be inversely related to the interviewee’s distance since the effect of biodiversity conservation interest would exceed the effect of disinterest associated with distance.
- Published
- 2020
14. Efecto distancia en la disposición a pagar por la conservación de la biodiversidad: el caso de un área protegida megadiversa
- Author
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Orihuela Romero, Carlos Enrique, Minaya, Carlos, Mercado, Waldemar, Jiménez, Luis Alberto, Estrada, Milagros, Gómez, Harriet Jazmine, Orihuela Romero, Carlos Enrique, Minaya, Carlos, Mercado, Waldemar, Jiménez, Luis Alberto, Estrada, Milagros, and Gómez, Harriet Jazmine
- Abstract
This research addresses the case of Manu National Park (PNM) in Peru, one of the most biodiverse protected areas worldwide. Applying the choice experiments (CE) method, based on 1.164 surveys in this country, the positive decay effect on the willingness to pay (WTP) was determined for the conservation of the PNM, at least for most of the attributes analyzed. This suggests that in cases of megadiverse areas, WTP for conservation may not be inversely related to the interviewee’s distance since the effect of biodiversity conservation interest would exceed the effect of disinterest associated with distance., Este estudio aborda el caso del Parque Nacional Manu (PNM) en Perú, una de las áreas más megadiversas del mundo. Aplicando el método experimentos de elección (EE), en base a 1.164 encuestas en este país, se determinó que el efecto distancia es positivo en la disposición a pagar (DAP) para la conserva-ción de biodiversidad del PNM, al menos para la mayor parte de los atributos analizados. Esto evidencia que en áreas megadiversas, la DAP puede no estar inversamente relacionada con la distancia del entrevistado ya que el efecto del interés por conservación de biodiversidad superaría al desinterés asociado a la distancia.
- Published
- 2020
15. Functional relationships beyond species richness patterns: trait matching in plant-bird mutualisms across scales.
- Author
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Dehling, D. Matthias, Töpfer, Till, Schaefer, H. Martin, Jordano, Pedro, Böhning‐Gaese, Katrin, and Schleuning, Matthias
- Subjects
- *
SPECIES diversity , *MUTUALISM , *FRUGIVORES , *MACROECOLOGY , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *MORPHOLOGY , *PREDICTION models - Abstract
Aim Functional relationships between species groups on macroecological scales have often been inferred from comparisons of species numbers across space. On large spatial scales, however, it is difficult to assess whether correlations of species numbers represent actual functional relationships. Here, we investigated the functional relationship between a feeding guild (fruit-eating birds) and its resource (fleshy-fruited plants) by studying the matching of their functional traits across spatial scales, from individual interactions to regional patterns. Location A 3000-m elevational gradient in the tropical Andes. Methods We sampled plant-bird interactions at two sites along the elevational gradient, and using multivariate statistics (fourth-corner analysis) we identified corresponding morphological traits of birds and plants that influenced which bird species fed from which plant species. We then tested whether the functional trait diversities of the bird species assemblages matched those of the plant species assemblages along the elevational gradient. Results Corresponding functional traits of birds and plants were closely and significantly correlated on the scale of individual plant-bird interactions. On the regional scale, the functional diversities, but not species numbers, of bird and plant assemblages correlated significantly along the elevational gradient. Main conclusions The analysis of species interaction networks with multivariate statistics was a powerful tool for identifying relationships between functional traits of interacting species. The close functional relationships between birds and plants on the scale of individual interactions and on the regional scale show that comparisons of functional trait diversities, based on matching traits of interacting species, are better suited than correlations of species numbers to reveal the mechanisms behind large-scale diversity patterns of interacting species. The identification of functional interdependences between interacting species on large spatial scales will be important for improving predictive models of species distributions in space and time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Distance-decay effect on willingness to pay for biodiversity conservation: The case of a megadiverse protected area
- Author
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Orihuela Romero, Carlos Enrique, Minaya, Carlos Alberto, Mercado, Waldemar, Jiménez, Luis Alberto, Estrada, Milagros, and Gómez, Harriet Jazmine
- Subjects
decay effect ,choice experiments ,Environmental Economics and Policy ,Biodiversity ,Manu National Park - Abstract
This research addresses the case of Manu National Park (PNM) in Peru, one of the most biodiverse protected areas worldwide. Applying the choice experiments (CE) method, based on 1.164 surveys in this country, the positive decay effect on the willingness to pay (WTP) was determined for the conservation of the PNM, at least for most of the attributes analyzed. This suggests that in cases of megadiverse areas, WTP for conservation may not be inversely related to the interviewee’s distance since the effect of biodiversity conservation interest would exceed the effect of disinterest associated with distance.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Impairment in Working Memory and Executive Function Associated with Mercury Exposure in Indigenous Populations in Upper Amazonian Peru.
- Author
-
Silman AK, Chhabria R, Hafzalla GW, Giffin L, Kucharski K, Myers K, Culquichicón C, Montero S, Lescano AG, Vega CM, Fernandez LE, Silman MR, Kane MJ, and Sanders JW
- Subjects
- Animals, Executive Function, Humans, Indigenous Peoples, Neuropsychological Tests, Peru, Memory, Short-Term, Mercury analysis
- Abstract
The Matsigenka people living traditional lifestyles in remote areas of the Amazon rely on a fish-based diet that exposes them to methylmercury (MeHg) at levels that have been associated with decreased IQ scores. In this study, the association between Hg levels and working memory was explored using the framework of the Multicomponent Model. Working memory tasks were modified to fit the culture and language of the Matsigenka when needed and included measures for verbal storage (Word Span) visuospatial storage (Corsi Block Task) and a measure of executive functions, the Self-Ordered Pointing Task (SOPT). An innovation of the Trail Making Tests A & B (TMT A & B) was pilot tested as another potential measure of executive functions. The mean hair Hg levels of 30 participants, ages 12 to 55 years, from three different communities (Maizal, Cacaotal and Yomibato) was 7.0 ppm (sd = 2.40), well above the World Health Organization (WHO) limit for hair of 2.0 ppm and ranged from 1.8 to 14.2 ppm, with 98% of a broader sample of 152 individuals exceeding the WHO limit. Hair Hg levels showed significant associations with cognitive performance, but the degree varied in magnitude according to the type of task. Hg levels were negatively associated with executive functioning performance (SOPT errors), while Hg levels and years of education predicted visuospatial performance (Corsi Block accuracy). Education was the only predictor of Word Span accuracy. The results show that Hg exposure is negatively associated with working memory performance when there is an increased reliance on executive functioning. Based on our findings and the review of the experimental research, we suggest that the SOPT and the Corsi Block have the potential to be alternatives to general intelligence tests when studying remote groups with extensive cultural differences.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Flesh-fy myiasis (Diptera: Sarcophagidae) in Dendropsophus schubarti (Anura: Hylidae) from Peru
- Author
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Eliana Quispitupac, Karina Junes, and Jorge Ruiz
- Subjects
amphibians ,biology ,Flesh ,Cocha Cashu ,Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Hylidae ,Madre de Dios ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,medicine ,parasitoidism ,Dendropsophus schubarti ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Myiasis ,Manu National Park ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 - Published
- 2019
19. Los helechos arborescentes dominan la sucesión secundaria en plantaciones de piña abandonadas alrededor del Parque Nacional del Manu, Perú
- Author
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Olivia Schilling and Adrian Tejedor Gutierrez
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Secondary succession ,Parque Nacional del Manu ,biology ,Climax ,Agroforestry ,National park ,Ecological succession ,biology.organism_classification ,Sucesión ecológica ,Helechos - Perú ,Cyathea delgadii ,Vegetation succession ,Perú ,Geography ,Amazonia ,Peru ,Ecosystem ,Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health ,Climax community ,Manu National Park ,Amazon ,Tree ferns ,Restoration ecology - Abstract
Habitat management and restoration in buffer zones of national parks is critical for maintaining ecosystem services and biological connectivity in and around the parks’ core protected areas. Vegetation succession in abandoned plantations in buffer zones may take different paths that reach climax ecosystems in more or less time depending on the conditions of initial succession, thus enhancing or hindering biological connectivity and ecosystem services. This study documents the dominance of tree ferns in the initial stages of vegetation succession on abandoned pineapple plantations on the Andean foothills around Manu National Park, Peru, and discusses the role it may have on ecosystem restoration. Four years after abandonment, tree fern gametophytes grow under the shade of pineapple plants and melastomes. After 6-10 years of succession, the vegetation is dominated by a tree fern community composed of at least eight species, of which the most common are by far Cyathea delgadii and Cyathea microdonta. Cyathea microdonta functions as a short-lived pioneer, reaching its peak of live stem density in 6 to10 years and dying off in older plots. Cyathea delgadii, on the other hand, continues to grow and persists beyond 10 years of succession. Areas adjacent to abandoned pineapple fields have few tree ferns and higher tree species diversity, suggesting that pineapple agriculture and the resulting tree fern community may be a longer pathway to reach climax vegetation stages than other types of plantation.
- Published
- 2018
20. Effect of Tree-Fall Gaps on Fruit-Feeding Nymphalid Butterfly Assemblages in a Peruvian Rain Forest.
- Author
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Pardonnet, Sylvia, Beck, Harald, Milberg, Per, and Bergman, Karl‐Olof
- Subjects
FRUIT research ,NYMPHALIDAE ,RAIN forests ,BUTTERFLIES ,LEPIDOPTERA ,PARQUE Nacional del Manu (Peru) - 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
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Ecosystem Carbon Storage Across the Grassland-Forest Transition in the High Andes of Manu National Park, Peru.
- Author
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Gibbon, Adam, Silman, Miles R., Malhi, Yadvinder, Fisher, Joshua B., Meir, Patrick, Zimmermann, Michael, Dargie, Greta C., Farfan, William R., and Garcia, Karina C.
- Subjects
- *
CARBON , *CLIMATE change , *BIOTIC communities , *BIODIVERSITY , *TIMBERLINE ,PARQUE Nacional del Manu (Peru) - Abstract
Improved management of carbon storage by terrestrial biomes has significant value for mitigating climate change. The carbon value of such management has the potential to provide additional income to rural communities and provide biodiversity and climate adaptation co-benefits. Here, we quantify the carbon stores in a 49,300-ha landscape centered on the cloud forest-grassland transition of the high Andes in Manu National Park, Peru. Aboveground carbon densities were measured across the landscape by field sampling of 70 sites above and below the treeline. The forest near the treeline contained 63.4 ± 5.2 Mg C ha aboveground, with an additional 13.9 ± 2.8 Mg C ha estimated to be stored in the coarse roots, using a root to shoot ratio of 0.26. Puna grasslands near the treeline were found to store 7.5 ± 0.7 Mg C ha in aboveground biomass. Comparing our result to soil data gathered by Zimmermann and others (Ecosystems 13:62-74, ), we found the ratio of belowground:aboveground carbon decreased from 15.8 on the puna to 8.6 in the transition zone and 2.1 in the forest. No significant relationships were found between carbon densities and slope, altitude or fire disturbance history, though grazing (for puna) was found to reduce aboveground carbon densities significantly. We scaled our study sites to the study region with remote sensing observations from Landsat. The carbon sequestration potential of improved grazing management and assisted upslope treeline migration was also estimated. Afforestation of puna at the treeline could generate revenues of US $1,374 per ha over the project lifetime via commercialization of the carbon credits from gains in aboveground carbon stocks. Uncertainties in the fate of the large soil carbon stocks under an afforestation scenario exist. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Trouble in Paradise: Indigenous Populations, Anthropological Policies, and Biodiversity Conservation in Manu National Park, Peru.
- Author
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Shepard, GlennH., Rummenhoeller, Klaus, Ohl-Schacherer, Julia, and Yu, DouglasW.
- Subjects
- *
INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) , *BIODIVERSITY conservation , *JOB vacancies ,PARQUE Nacional del Manu (Peru) - Abstract
Manu National Park was founded in 1973 on a profound contradiction: The “untouchable” core area is, in fact, the homeland of a large indigenous population, including the Matsigenka (Machiguenga). Some view the Westernization of native communities living in protected areas as a threat to biodiversity conservation and suggest that such populations should be enticed to resettle outside parks. Here, we present an overview of the indigenous populations of Manu, outline the history of the park and its anthropological policies, and discuss evolving park-Matsigenka conflicts as well as areas of common interest. Analysis reveals that resettlement has no political, legal, or practical viability. Thus, given the options available, we propose that long-term biodiversity conservation can best be achieved through a “tenure for defense” trade: indigenous communities receive explicit benefits (e.g., infrastructure and service investments, employment opportunities, or economic alternatives such as ecotourism) in exchange for helping to defend the park against incursion and managing vulnerable resources such as game animals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Game Vertebrate Densities in Hunted and Nonhunted Forest Sites in Manu National Park, Peru.
- Author
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Endo, Whaldener, Peres, Carlos A., Salas, Edith, Mori, Sandra, Sanchez-Vega, Jose-Luis, Shepard, Glenn H., Pacheco, Victor, and Yu, Douglas W.
- Subjects
VERTEBRATE surveys ,FORESTS & forestry ,ENVIRONMENTAL sciences ,SOIL fertility ,PARQUE Nacional del Manu (Peru) - Abstract
Manu National Park of southern Peru is one of the most renowned protected areas in the world, yet large-bodied vertebrate surveys conducted to date have been restricted to Cocha Cashu Biological Station, a research station covering <0.06 percent of the 1.7 Mha park. Manu Park is occupied by >460 settled Matsigenka Amerindians, 300–400 isolated Matsigenka, and several, little-known groups of isolated hunter–gatherers, yet the impact of these native Amazonians on game vertebrate populations within the park remains poorly understood. On the basis of 1495 km of standardized line-transect censuses, we present density and biomass estimates for 23 mammal, bird, and reptile species for seven lowland and upland forest sites in Manu Park, including Cocha Cashu. We compare these estimates between hunted and nonhunted sites within Manu Park, and with other Neotropical forest sites. Manu Park safeguards some of the most species-rich and highest biomass assemblages of arboreal and terrestrial mammals ever recorded in Neotropical forests, most likely because of its direct Andean influence and high levels of soil fertility. Relative to Barro Colorado Island, seed predators and arboreal folivores in Manu are rare, and generalist frugivores specializing on mature fruit pulp are abundant. The impact of such a qualitative shift in the vertebrate community on the dynamics of plant regeneration, and therefore, on our understanding of tropical plant ecology, must be profound. Despite a number of external threats, Manu Park continues to serve as a baseline against which other Neotropical forests can be gauged. Abstract in Spanish is available at . [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. SEED PREDATION BY NEOTROPICAL RAIN FOREST MAMMALS INCREASES DIVERSITY IN SEEDLING RECRUITMENT.
- Author
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Paine, C. E. Timothy and Beck, Harald
- Subjects
- *
BIOLOGICAL research , *BIODIVERSITY , *SEED pathology , *SEED dispersal , *PECCARIES , *FORESTS & forestry , *RAIN forests ,PARQUE Nacional del Manu (Peru) - Abstract
Seed dispersal and seedling recruitment (the transition of seeds to seedlings) set the spatiotemporal distribution of new individuals in plant communities. Many terrestrial rain forest mammals consume post-dispersal seeds and seedlings, often inflicting density-dependent mortality. In part because of density-dependent mortality, diversity often increases during seedling recruitment, making it a critical stage for species coexistence. We determined how mammalian predators, adult tree abundance, and seed mass interact to affect seedling recruitment in a western Amazonian rain forest. We used exclosures that were selectively permeable to three size classes of mammals: mice and spiny rats (weighing <1 kg), medium- sized rodents (1–12 kg), and large mammals (20–200 kg). Into each exclosure, we placed seeds of 13 tree species and one canopy liana, which varied by an order of magnitude in adult abundance and seed mass. We followed the fates of the seeds and resulting seedlings for at least 17 months. We assessed the effect of each mammalian size class on seed survival, seedling survival and growth, and the density and diversity of the seedlings that survived to the end of the experiment. Surprisingly, large mammals had no detectable effect at any stage of seedling recruitment. In contrast, small- and medium-sized mammals significantly reduced seed survival, seedling survival, and seedling density. Furthermore, predation by small mammals increased species richness on a per-stem basis. This increase in diversity resulted from their disproportionately intense predation on common species and large-seeded species. Small mammals thereby generated a rare-species advantage in seedling recruitment, the critical ingredient for frequency dependence. Predation by small (and to a lesser extent, medium-sized) mammals on seeds and seedlings significantly increases tree species diversity in tropical forests. This is the first long-term study to dissect the effects of various mammalian predators on the recruitment of a diverse set of tree species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The Sustainability of Subsistence Hunting by Matsigenka Native Communities in Manu National Park, Peru.
- Author
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OHL‐SCHACHERER, JULIA, SHEPARD, GLENN H., KAPLAN, HILLARD, PERES, CARLOS A., LEVI, TAAL, and YU, DOUGLAS W.
- Subjects
- *
INDIGENOUS peoples , *SUBSISTENCE hunting , *BIODIVERSITY , *SUSTAINABLE development , *POPULATION , *MONKEYS ,PARQUE Nacional del Manu (Peru) - Abstract
The presence of indigenous people in tropical parks has fueled a debate over whether people in parks are conservation allies or direct threats to biodiversity. A well-known example is the Matsigenka (or Machiguenga) population residing in Manu National Park in Peruvian Amazonia. Because the exploitation of wild meat (or bushmeat), especially large vertebrates, represents the most significant internal threat to biodiversity in Manu, we analyzed 1 year of participatory monitoring of game offtake in two Matsigenka native communities within Manu Park (102,397 consumer days and 2,089 prey items). We used the Robinson and Redford (1991) index to identify five prey species hunted at or above maximum sustainable yield within the ∼150-km2 core hunting zones of the two communities: woolly monkey (Lagothrix lagotricha), spider monkey (Ateles chamek), white-lipped peccary (Tayassu pecari), Razor-billed Currasow (Mitu tuberosa), and Spix's Guan (Penelope jacquacu). There was little or no evidence that any of these five species has become depleted, other than locally, despite a near doubling of the human population since 1988. Hunter–prey profiles have not changed since 1988, and there has been little change in per capita consumption rates or mean prey weights. The current offtake by the Matsigenka appears to be sustainable, apparently due to source–sink dynamics. Source–sink dynamics imply that even with continued human population growth within a settlement, offtake for each hunted species will eventually reach an asymptote. Thus, stabilizing the Matsigenka population around existing settlements should be a primary policy goal for Manu Park. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. A NEW SPECIES OF ARBOREAL RHINELLA (ANURA: BUFONIDAE) FROM CLOUD FOREST OF SOUTHEASTERN PERU.
- Author
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Chaparro, Juan Carlos, Pramuk, Jennifer B., and Gluesenkamp, Andrew G.
- Subjects
- *
TOADS , *DNA , *PHYLOGENY ,PARQUE Nacional del Manu (Peru) - Abstract
A new arboreal species of Rhinella is described from the humid montane forest of Manu National Park in the Cordillera Oriental of southern Peru. The new species can be distinguished from all known Rhinella by a unique combination of external and osteological characters as well as by molecular data. The new toad is compared to R. arborescandens and R. veraguensis with respect to external characters. On the basis of morphological and molecular data, the new taxon is closely related to R. chavin, R. nesiotes, and R. festae. Although DNA data indicate that a member of the R. veraguensis group (R. nesiotes) is its sister taxon, the new species is not closely related to other members of this species group (e.g., R. veraguensis). In addition, DNA data indicate that the R. veraguensis group as it currently is defined is paraphyletic. Until additional studies are completed on the phylogeny of these South American toads, we refrain from assigning the new taxon to a species group. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Orchid Bees Of The Manu Learning Centre, Perú - Abejas De Las Orquídeas Del Manu Learning Centre, Perú
- Author
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Allen, Laura, Elme-Tumpay, Araseli, Marquina-Montesinos, Edgar Luis, Yabar-Landa, Erick, Bustamante-Navarrete, Abdhiel Arnaldo, Villacampa, Jaime, and Foster, Kristi
- Subjects
Abejas de las orquideas ,Perú ,Manu ,Parque Nacional del Manu ,orchids ,Peru ,Orchid bees ,bees ,Biodiversity ,Manu Learning Centre (MLC) ,Manu National Park ,Biodiversidad - Abstract
This is a short bilingual guide to the identification of the genera of the orchid bees (Apidae: Euglossini). The guide also contains some information on the ecology of these bees and sampling methods, along with useful resources for those who wish to learn more. The accessible text along with diagrams and photographs makes this guide accessible to non-specialists, as well as a useful resource for students and researchers. /// Esta es una breve guía bilingüe para la identificación de los géneros de las abejas de orquídeas (Apidae: Euglossini). La guía también contiene información sobre la ecología de estas abejas y métodos de muestreo, junto con recursos útiles para quienes desean aprender más. El texto accesible junto con diagramas y fotografías hace que esta guía sea accesible para personas que no sean especialistas, así como un recurso útil para estudiantes e investigadores
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Tree ferns dominate secondary succession in abandoned pineapple plantations around Manu National Park, Peru
- Author
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Schilling, Olivia, Tejedor Gutierrez, Adrian, Schilling, Olivia, and Tejedor Gutierrez, Adrian
- Abstract
Habitat management and restoration in buffer zones of national parks is critical for maintaining ecosystem services and biological connectivity in and around the parks’ core protected areas. Vegetation succession in abandoned plantations in buffer zones may take different paths that reach climax ecosystems in more or less time depending on the conditions of initial succession, thus enhancing or hindering biological connectivity and ecosystem services. This study documents the dominance of tree ferns in the initial stages of vegetation succession on abandoned pineapple plantations on the Andean foothills around Manu National Park, Peru, and discusses the role it may have on ecosystem restoration. Four years after abandonment, tree fern gametophytes grow under the shade of pineapple plants and melastomes. After 6-10 years of succession, the vegetation is dominated by a tree fern community composed of at least eight species, of which the most common are by far Cyathea delgadii and Cyathea microdonta. Cyathea microdonta functions as a short-lived pioneer, reaching its peak of live stem density in 6 to10 years and dying off in older plots. Cyathea delgadii, on the other hand, continues to grow and persists beyond 10 years of succession. Areas adjacent to abandoned pineapple fields have few tree ferns and higher tree species diversity, suggesting that pineapple agriculture and the resulting tree fern community may be a longer pathway to reach climax vegetation stages than other types of plantation., El manejo y la restauración de hábitats en áreas de amortiguamiento de parques nacionales son críticos para mantener los servicios ecosistémicos y la conectividad biológica alrededor de las zonas núcleo de las áreas protegidas. La sucesión ecológica en plantaciones abandonadas en áreas de amortiguamiento pueden seguir cursos diferentes que alcanzan estabilidad en más o menos tiempo en dependencia de las condiciones iniciales de la sucesión, mejorando u obstaculizando los servicios ecosistémicos y la conectividad biológica. Este estudio documenta la dominancia de los helechos arborescentes en las etapas iniciales de la sucesión ecológica en piñales abandonados en el piedemonte Amazónico de los Andes en el Parque Nacional del Manu. Cuatro años después del abandono de las plantaciones, los gametofitos de helechos arborescentes se encuentran creciendo a la sombra de plantas de piña y de la familia Melastomataceae. Después de 6–10 años de sucesión, la vegetación aparece dominada por una comunidad de helechos arborescentes de al menos ocho especies, entre las cuales las más comunes son Cyathea delgadii y Cyathea microdonta . Cyathea microdonta funciona como una especie pionera de vida corta, alcanzando su pico de densidad a los 6–10 años y prácticamente desapareciendo en parcelas más antiguas. Cyathea delgadii, por otro lado, continua creciendo y persiste más allá de los diez años. Las áreas adyacentes a los piñales abandonados muestran relativamente pocos helechos arborescentes y mayor diversidad de árboles, lo cual sugiere que el cultivo de piña y la comunidad de helechos arborescentes que le sucede puede ser un mecanismo de sucesión más largo hacia la recuperación de la vegetación clímax que otros tipos de cultivos.
- Published
- 2017
29. Effect of Tree-Fall Gaps on Fruit-Feeding Nymphalid Butterfly Assemblages in a Peruvian Rain Forest
- Author
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Karl-Olof Bergman, Per Milberg, Harald Beck, and Sylvia Pardonnet
- Subjects
Neotropics ,biology ,Ecology ,Species diversity ,Understory ,Rainforest ,biology.organism_classification ,Nymphalidae ,gap dynamics ,Frugivore ,Geography ,Amazonia ,Habitat ,Teknik och teknologier ,Butterfly ,Engineering and Technology ,Gap dynamics ,intermediate disturbances ,lepidoptera ,vine ,Manu National Park ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
One of the main natural disturbances that affects the structure of rain forests is treefalls, frequently resulting in gaps. Tree-fall gaps can bring drastic changes in environmental conditions compared with the undisturbed understory. We investigated the effect of tree-fall gaps on fruit-feeding butterfly (Nymphalidae) species assemblages in an undisturbed lowland rain forest in southeastern Peru. We used fruit-baited traps suspended 2 m above ground in 15 tree-fall gaps ranging in area from 100 to 1000 m2 and in adjacent undisturbed understory. Our data support the hypothesis that tree-fall gap and understory habitats are utilized by different butterfly species assemblages. There were morphological differences between gap and understory species, where the understory species had a larger wing area to thoracic volume. Vegetation structure and composition were important factors affecting the butterfly assemblages. Most of the butterfly species showed an avoidance of vines and a strong association with the presence of trees and shrubs in gaps. There were also differences among gap assemblages that increased with gap size. Some of the species that were associated with gaps have been considered as canopy species. Other gap species in the present study, however, are known to feed on fruits and/or use host plants mainly, or only, occurring in gaps, implicating that the gap assemblage is a mix of canopy species and those unique to gaps. This indicates that, in an undisturbed Amazon forest, tree-fall gaps may contribute to maintain species diversity by creating a mosaic of specific habitats and resources that favors different butterfly assemblages.
- Published
- 2013
30. Does Remoteness from Urban Centres Influence Plant Diversity in Homegardens and Swidden Fields?: A Case Study from the Matsiguenka in the Amazonian Rain Forest of Peru
- Author
-
Wezel, A. and Ohl, J.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Trophic Relationships within a Highland Rodent Assemblage from Manu National Park, Cusco, Peru: Relaciones TróFicas Dentro De Un Ensamble De Roedores De Altura En E1 Parque Nacional Del Manu, Cusco, Perú
- Author
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Solari, Sergio, author
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Nueva especie de Hesperiidae (Lepidoptera) para Perú: Dalla granites (Mabille, 1898)
- Author
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Cerdeña, José Alfredo, Huamaní, Erick, Delgado, Rómulo, and Lamas, Gerardo
- Subjects
Dalla ,Hesperiidae ,Parque Nacional del Manu ,Peru ,Manu National Park ,Perú ,New record ,Nuevo registro - Abstract
The rare skipper Dalla granites (Mabille, 1898) (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae), previously cited from Ecuador and Bolivia is reported for the first time in Peru., Se registra por primera vez para Perú al raro hespérido Dalla granites (Mabille, 1898) (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae), previamente citado de Ecuador y Bolivia.
- Published
- 2014
33. A new skipper species for Peru: Dalla granites (Mabille, 1898) (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae)
- Author
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José Alfredo Cerdeña, Erick Huamaní, Rómulo Delgado, and Gerardo Lamas
- Subjects
Dalla ,Hesperiidae ,Parque Nacional del Manu ,Perú ,Nuevo registro ,New record ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Peru ,lcsh:Q ,lcsh:Science ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Manu National Park - Abstract
Se registra por primera vez para Perú al raro hespérido Dalla granites (Mabille, 1898) (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae), previamente citado de Ecuador y Bolivia The rare skipper Dalla granites (Mabille, 1898) (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae), previously cited from Ecuador and Bolivia is reported for the first time in Peru
- Published
- 2014
34. 'A little lizard among crocodiles': ecotourism and indigenous negotiations in the Peruvian rainforest
- Author
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Wiest, Ray (Anthropology) Berkes, Fikret (Natural Resources Institute), Frohlick, Susan (Anthropology), Herrera, Jessica, Wiest, Ray (Anthropology) Berkes, Fikret (Natural Resources Institute), Frohlick, Susan (Anthropology), and Herrera, Jessica
- Abstract
The Peruvian government has used a top-down colonial approach to nature-based conservation. This approach has effectively marginalized Indigenous people located in designated protected areas. For the Matsiguenka communities inhabiting Manu National Park, such an approach has created socioeconomic and political problems. Ecotourism is given to them as the only socioeconomic development option for the acquisition of supplementary income to their subsistence lifestyle and for their integration into the global capitalist economy. My research questions include: 1) whether or not marginalized Indigenous groups are given a chance to negotiate their own cultural values, knowledge and practices within the context dominated by global capitalism forces, such as the international tourism industry, and 2) how neo-liberal strategies such as ecotourism, which is sold as an economic panacea for communities in out-of-the-way-places such as the Peruvian rainforest, work in practice. I draw upon narratives on ecotourism, collected in my five-month fieldwork, as told by the multiple stakeholders of ecotourism. I use these narratives to highlight the complexities, pitfalls and incongruent, hegemonic and predatory nature of ecotourism as it plays out in Manu National Park. Through their Multicommunal Enterprise Matsiguenka, these traditionally hunter and gatherer people are courageously and creatively venturing into the ecotourism industry hoping to benefit their communities. However, the “wild” competition in the “green” capitalist market makes this type of venture a great challenge.
- Published
- 2007
35. National park in the Amazon rain forest
- Author
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Tinker, Jon
- Subjects
- *
NATIONAL parks & reserves , *RECREATION , *FORESTS & forestry , *CONSERVATION of natural resources , *BIOTIC communities , *HABITAT conservation - Published
- 1974
36. Magnificent Manu
- Author
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Jungius, Hartmut
- Published
- 1975
37. The Sustainability of Subsistence Hunting by Matsigenka Native Communities in Manu National Park, Peru
- Author
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Shepard, Glenn H., Kaplan, Hillard, Peres, Carlos A., and Yu, Douglas W.
- Published
- 2007
38. Synergistic Impacts of Ungulates and Falling Palm Fronds on Saplings in the Amazon
- Author
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Beck, Harald
- Published
- 2007
39. A New Species of Arboreal Rhinella (Anura: Bufonidae) from Cloud Forest of Southeastern Peru
- Author
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Pramuk, Jennifer B. and Gluesenkamp, Andrew G.
- Published
- 2007
40. Amphibia, Anura, Bufonidae, Rhinella manu Chaparro, Pramuk and Gluesenkamp, 2007; Rhinella tacana Padial, Reichle, Mcdiarmid and de la Riva, 2006: Distribution extension and country record from southern Peru
- Author
-
Lourdes Y. Echevarría, Diego Vásquez, and Germán Chávez
- Subjects
Arboreal locomotion ,arboreal toads ,Rhinella manu ,Ecology ,biology ,National park ,business.industry ,QH301-705.5 ,Distribution (economics) ,biology.organism_classification ,Geography ,Herpetofauna ,Rhinella ,Montane ecology ,Type locality ,Manu ,Biology (General) ,business ,Manu National Park ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
As a result of several surveys on the montane forests of southern Peru, we provide new distribution data for two arboreal toads (Anura: Bufonidae). An important distribution extension for Rhinella manu, outside of Manu National Park (Cusco department, Peru), location of the type locality, and the first record for Rhinella tacana in Peru, extending the distribution of both species by about 235 and 582 km (airline), respectively, are given herein.
41. Succession and Micro-Elevation Effects on Seedling Establishment of Calophyllum brasiliense Camb. (Clusiaceae) in an Amazonian River Meander Forest
- Author
-
King, Rachel T.
- Published
- 2003
42. A NEW SPECIES OF ARBOREAL RHINELLA (ANURA: BUFONIDAE) FROM CLOUD FOREST OF SOUTHEASTERN PERU
- Author
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Carlos Chaparro, Juan, Pramuk, Jennifer B., and Gluesenkamp, Andrew G.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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