An urgent call‐to‐action to protect the nonhuman primates and Indigenous Peoples of the Brazilian Amazon

Author:

Garber Paul A.12ORCID,Estrada Alejandro3,Klain Vinícius4,Bicca‐Marques Júlio César4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology and Program in Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology University of Illinois Urbana Illinois USA

2. International Centre of Biodiversity and Primate Conservation Dali University Dali Yunnan China

3. Institute of Biology National Autonomous University of Mexico Mexico City Mexico

4. Laboratório de Primatologia, Escola de Ciências da Saúde e da Vida, Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul Porto Alegre Brazil

Abstract

AbstractPrimates are facing an impending extinction crisis. Here, we examine the set of conservation challenges faced by the 100 primate species that inhabit the Brazilian Amazon, the largest remaining area of primary tropical rainforest in the world. The vast majority (86%) of Brazil's Amazonian primate species have declining populations. Primate population decline in Amazonia has been driven principally by deforestation related to the production of forest‐risk commodities including soy and cattle ranching, the illegal logging and setting of fires, dam building, road and rail construction, hunting, mining, and the confiscation and conversion of Indigenous Peoples' traditional lands. In a spatial analysis of the Brazilian Amazon, we found that 75% of Indigenous Peoples' lands (IPLs) remained forested compared with 64% of Conservation Units (CUs) and 56% of other lands (OLs). In addition, primate species richness was significantly higher on IPLs than on CUs and OLs. Thus, safeguarding Indigenous Peoples' land rights, systems of knowledge, and human rights is one of the most effective ways to protect Amazonian primates and the conservation value of the ecosystems they inhabit. Intense public and political pressure is required and a global call‐to‐action is needed to encourage all Amazonian countries, especially Brazil, as well as citizens of consumer nations, to actively commit to changing business as usual, living more sustainably, and doing all they can to protect the Amazon. We end with a set of actions one can take to promote primate conservation in the Brazilian Amazon.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference67 articles.

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2. Deforestation and climate change are projected to increase heat stress risk in the Brazilian Amazon

3. Andrade E. G. Bispo F. &Potter H.(2020). Illegal mining sparks malaria outbreak in Indigenous territories in Brazil.Mongabay.https://news.mongabay.com/2020/12/illegal-mining-sparks-malaria-outbreak-in-indigenous-territories-in-brazil/

4. No Planet for Apes? Assessing Global Priority Areas and Species Affected by Linear Infrastructures

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