| Uakaris for real: Conservation initiatives in Peru and Brazil Bowler, M., H. Queiroz, R. Bodmer & P. Puertas Control of hunting and timber extraction are key elements of current initiatives for the conservation of Cacajao. Here, we describe these initiatives and discuss their contribution to conservation goals. The Mamirauá Sustainable Development Reserve, Brazil was created largely for Cacajao calvus calvus. This subspecies is restricted almost entirely to Mamirauá and is rarely hunted, so the only threat facing it is the transformation of flooded forest habitats. Since one tree species logged at Mamirauá is of great importance in the diet of this primate, a sustainable use forestry program has banned the exploitation of this species in the reserve. Cacajao calvus ucayalii has a patchy range, making it difficult to identify areas for protection. Until recently the Tamshiyacu Tahuayo Communal Reserve, Peru was the only protected area where it occurred. Community management here has resulted in a decrease in the hunting of primates. On the Yavari River, Peru where C. c. ucayalii is relatively abundant, large areas are designated as logging concessions. Research in 2005 has supported a successful application to make part of the logging concession area a Conservation Concession. A fourth site, Amanã Sustainable Development Reserve, protects a population of Cacajao melanocephalus, one of the primates most hunted by the reserve's inhabitants. Research is being carried out on hunting and on the ecology of C. melanocephalus to evaluate the sustainability of current hunting levels. voltar a programação do simpósio |
| Red uacari (Cacajao calvus ucayalii), Peru Photo: Mark Bowler |
