Estrada Alejandro, Garber Paul A, Mittermeier Russell A, Wich Serge, Gouveia Sidney, Dobrovolski Ricardo, Nekaris K A I, Nijman Vincent, Rylands Anthony B, Maisels Fiona, Williamson Elizabeth A, Bicca-Marques Julio, Fuentes Agustin, Jerusalinsky Leandro, Johnson Steig, Rodrigues de Melo Fabiano, Oliveira Leonardo, Schwitzer Christoph, Roos Christian, Cheyne Susan M, Martins Kierulff Maria Cecilia, Raharivololona Brigitte, Talebi Mauricio, Ratsimbazafy Jonah, Supriatna Jatna, Boonratana Ramesh, Wedana Made, Setiawan Arif
Institute of Biology, National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), Mexico City, Mexico.
Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA.
PeerJ. 2018 Jun 15;6:e4869. doi: 10.7717/peerj.4869. eCollection 2018.
Primates occur in 90 countries, but four-Brazil, Madagascar, Indonesia, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)-harbor 65% of the world's primate species (439) and 60% of these primates are Threatened, Endangered, or Critically Endangered (IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017-3). Considering their importance for global primate conservation, we examine the anthropogenic pressures each country is facing that place their primate populations at risk. Habitat loss and fragmentation are main threats to primates in Brazil, Madagascar, and Indonesia. However, in DRC hunting for the commercial bushmeat trade is the primary threat. Encroachment on primate habitats driven by local and global market demands for food and non-food commodities hunting, illegal trade, the proliferation of invasive species, and human and domestic-animal borne infectious diseases cause habitat loss, population declines, and extirpation. Modeling agricultural expansion in the 21st century for the four countries under a worst-case-scenario, showed a primate range contraction of 78% for Brazil, 72% for Indonesia, 62% for Madagascar, and 32% for DRC. These pressures unfold in the context of expanding human populations with low levels of development. Weak governance across these four countries may limit effective primate conservation planning. We examine landscape and local approaches to effective primate conservation policies and assess the distribution of protected areas and primates in each country. Primates in Brazil and Madagascar have 38% of their range inside protected areas, 17% in Indonesia and 14% in DRC, suggesting that the great majority of primate populations remain vulnerable. We list the key challenges faced by the four countries to avert primate extinctions now and in the future. In the short term, effective law enforcement to stop illegal hunting and illegal forest destruction is absolutely key. Long-term success can only be achieved by focusing local and global public awareness, and actively engaging with international organizations, multinational businesses and consumer nations to reduce unsustainable demands on the environment. Finally, the four primate range countries need to ensure that integrated, sustainable land-use planning for economic development includes the maintenance of biodiversity and intact, functional natural ecosystems.
灵长类动物分布于90个国家,但巴西、马达加斯加、印度尼西亚和刚果民主共和国这四个国家拥有全球65%的灵长类物种(439种),其中60%的灵长类动物受到威胁、濒危或极度濒危(《世界自然保护联盟濒危物种红色名录》2017 - 3)。鉴于它们对全球灵长类动物保护的重要性,我们研究了每个国家面临的人为压力,这些压力使它们的灵长类种群面临风险。栖息地丧失和破碎化是巴西、马达加斯加和印度尼西亚灵长类动物面临的主要威胁。然而,在刚果民主共和国,商业性丛林肉贸易的捕猎是主要威胁。当地和全球市场对食品和非食品商品的需求导致对灵长类动物栖息地的侵占,包括捕猎、非法贸易、入侵物种的扩散以及人类和家畜传播的传染病,这些都导致了栖息地丧失、种群数量下降和物种灭绝。在最坏的情况下,对这四个国家21世纪农业扩张的建模显示,巴西灵长类动物分布范围收缩78%,印度尼西亚为72%,马达加斯加为62%,刚果民主共和国为32%。这些压力在人口增长且发展水平较低的背景下不断加剧。这四个国家治理薄弱可能会限制有效的灵长类动物保护规划。我们研究了有效的灵长类动物保护政策的景观和地方方法,并评估了每个国家保护区和灵长类动物的分布情况。巴西和马达加斯加境内38%的灵长类动物分布范围位于保护区内,印度尼西亚为17%,刚果民主共和国为14%,这表明绝大多数灵长类种群仍然脆弱。我们列出了这四个国家目前及未来避免灵长类动物灭绝所面临的关键挑战。短期内,有效的执法以制止非法捕猎和非法森林破坏绝对至关重要。长期成功只能通过提高地方和全球公众意识,并积极与国际组织、跨国企业和消费国合作,以减少对环境的不可持续需求来实现。最后,这四个灵长类动物分布国家需要确保为经济发展进行的综合、可持续土地利用规划包括维护生物多样性以及完整、功能正常的自然生态系统。