Low primate diversity and abundance in Northern Amazonia and its implications for conservation

ARM Pontes, MD de Paula, WE Magnusson - Biotropica, 2012 - Wiley Online Library
Biotropica, 2012Wiley Online Library
Large areas of the Rio Negro basin in Amazonia are covered by continuous tracts of tropical
forest, but have few primate species. This is anomalous considering the general relationship
between area and number of species. One possibility is that much of the forest is unsuitable
habitat for most primates and the area of suitable habitat is much less than the forested area.
This has important consequences for the design of reserves and predictions of the
consequences of climate change, which tend to be based on broad categories based on …
Abstract
Large areas of the Rio Negro basin in Amazonia are covered by continuous tracts of tropical forest, but have few primate species. This is anomalous considering the general relationship between area and number of species. One possibility is that much of the forest is unsuitable habitat for most primates and the area of suitable habitat is much less than the forested area. This has important consequences for the design of reserves and predictions of the consequences of climate change, which tend to be based on broad categories based on satellite images, and not on information of species distributions within those broad categories. The study was conducted through diurnal and nocturnal line‐transect surveys in the Biodiversity Research Program 25‐km2 permanent grid in Viruá National Park, which has vegetation associations typical of much of northern Amazonia. The highest primate diversity and abundances occurred in tall terra firme forests (58%), whereas inundated forests and scrublands, which cover 42 percent of the survey grid and 90.8 percent of the Viruá National Park, have virtually no primates. This suggests that parks and reserves in northwestern Amazonia will have to be very large to maintain viable populations of most primates and their ecological interactions, and that very broad habitat categories are not sufficient to make predictions about actual and future suitability of areas for primate conservation.
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