Primate Laboratory: participants

 

LABORATORIO DE PRIMATOLOGIA

Estación de Biología "Los Tuxtlas"

 Instituto de Biología

Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México


 

 Students from years prior to 2007

 

 

Carlos Jímenez Arano. MSci, Colegio de la Frontera Sur (ECOSUR - San Cristóbal de las Casas), Chiapas.

 

GENERAL ACTIVITY OF BATS MEASURED WITH ULTRASOUND DETECTORS IN PALENQUE NATIONAL PARK, MEXICO.

 

 

David Muñoz Zetina. Maestría, Colegio de la Frontera Sur (ECOSUR - San Cristóbal de las Casas). <aullador@primatesmx.com>

Plant resources used as food by howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata) in a cacao plantation in Comalcalco, México. Seleciona aquí para consultar la página de este proyecto

 

Alejandra Duarte Quiroga. Licenciatura, Escuela Nacional de Antropología, CONACULTA, Mexico,

 

Primate traffic in Mexico City: implications for primate conservation.

 

 

Yasminda García del Valle. Maestría,Colegio de la Frontera Sur(ECOSUR - San Cristóbal de las Casas).

 

Population genetics of black howler monkeys Alouattapigra) living in continuous and in fragmented habitat in southern Mexico: a preliminary study using molecular techniques

 

 

Andrómeda Rivera. Maestría, Colegio de la Frontera Sur (ECOSUR, Chetumal). andromeda@primatesmx.com  Asesor: Dr. Sophie Calme (ECOSUR-Chetumal)

Diet of Black howler monkeys (Alouatta pigra) in sites under different conservation regimes in the region of Calakmul, Campeche, México

 

 

 

Lesly Alejandre Sierra. BSci Thesis. Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas. Instituto Politecnico Nacional

 

Nocturnal activity of insectivorous bats measured with ultrasound detectors in the tropical rain forest of Los Tuxtlas, Mexico.

 

 

 

Octavio Cruz Lechuga. BSci Thesis. Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas. Instituto Politecnico Nacional. 2005-06

 

Survey of terrestrial mammals using camera-traps in the tropical rain forest of Los Tuxtlas, Mexico

 

Nimsi Enciso. Academic Internship June-July, 2006. Escuela de Ciencias Biologicas, Benemérita Universidad Autonoma de Puebla. 2005-06

 Activity patterns of bats in the forest canopy: a preliminary assessment using ultrasound detectors

 

 

Angel Merlo. Academic Internship June-July, 2006. Escuela de Ciencias Biologicas, Benemérita Universidad Autonoma de Puebla. 2005-06

 

Activity patterns of bats in the forest canopy: a preliminary assessment using ultrasound detectors

 

 

Adelina Carbajal. Academic Internship. August 2006. Vet School, Univ del Estado de Mexico

 

Assisting surveys of bats and non flying mammals in the tropical rain forest ecosystem of Los Tuxtlas, Mexico.

 


 

Lucía Castellanos Velázquez, Licenciatura. Departamento de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. luciacv@primatesmx.com

 

Study of the population and state of conservation sof the Black howler monkey (Alouatta pigra) in the Mayan archaeological site of Palenque, Chiapas.

Of the two species of howler monkeys present in southern Mexico, Alouatta pigra has a restricted geographic distribution in the country and is an endemic species to the Mesoamerican region. Our knowledge of aspects of population, ecology, behavior and conservation for this species is practically non existent. This project attempts to contribute to such gap of information by gathering data on aspects of population and state of conservation of A. pigra existing within the protected area of the Mayan site of Palenque in Chiapas, Mexico. Field surveys within the Mayan site indicate the presence of about 200 howlers members of about 20 troops and some solitary individuals. Estimated population density of howlers at the site is 23 indiv/square km and mean troop size is 7.0 individuals. We are gathering information on the conservation pressures upon this important population of A. pigra. In addition we are working on developing a project to include the howler monkeys as part of the cultural attraction of the Mayan site, including disemination of the value of preserving these primates among the local human inhabitants.


 

Programa de Posgrado

Facultad de Ciencias

UNAM

Cristina Jasso del Toro. Maestria. Posgrado de Ciencias Biológicas UNAM.

 

TROPICAL RAIN FOREST FRAGMENTATION AND THE PROCESS OF SOCIALIZATION OF YOUNG INDIVIDUALS IN WILD HOWLER MONKEYS (Alouatta palliata) IN SOUTHERN MEXICO.

 

Tropical rain forest fragmentation results in reduction of size of primate populations, in fragmentation of these into isolated units in the landscape, and in demographic and social disruption. Because of their importance to individual fitness, one of the behavior patterns sensible to the process of demographic and social disruption is the process of socialization of young individuals. To what extent “normal” socialization processes in howler monkeys change as a result of the disruption caused by fragmentation of the population resulting from fragmentation and isolation of their habitat, and what are the consequences for individual fitness and subpopulation persistence in fragmented landscapes, are important questions in our research. With this in mind, we are investigating the socialization process in juvenile and infants of howler monkey troops existing in extensive and in fragmented forests in the region of Los Tuxtlas, Veracruz, Mexico. We hope that the information we are gathering will further our documentation of socialization processes in Alouatta and our knowledge of the behavioral plasticity of howler monkeys. We also expect that such information will help us emit diagnostics about conservation models that could be useful in promoting the persistence of populations of howler monkeys in southern Mexico

 


Emilio Barrueta Rath. Programa Posgrado. Colegio de la Frontera Sur. Campeche, México.  Maestria. Survey of the population of the primate population and their conservation status in Calakmul, Campeche, México.

The state of Campeche forms part of the original geographic distribution of two primate species present in southern Mexico: Alouatta pigra y Ateles geoffroyi. However, our knowdledge about the size of the populations of both species and of their current geographic distribution in Campecheis scanty. Such information is urgently needed in view of the rapid and vast transformation of primate habitats to agrosystems, something which has resulted in the local extinction of both species. Our project is the first of series aimed at gathering quantititative data on the size and demographic structure of populations of A. pigra y A. geoffroyi in the Callakmul and in surrounding areas in Campeche. The project will attempt to diagnose the pressures originating from human activity related factors on remaining primate habitats by surveying primate populations in the protected forest of the Calakmul reserve and in unprotected forests in two sites in the vicinity. We will attempt to build descriptive models about the size and distribution of populations of both primate species under two different kinds of ecological scenarios and to design predictive models to produce explicit recommendations for the conservations of such populations.


Andrómeda Rivera, Departamento de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Licenciatura. Effects of tropical rain forest fragmentation on the conservation of biodiversity: an experimental study with artificial nests in Los Tuxtlas, Veracruz, México.

The destruction, fragmentation and isolation of tropical rain forests results in the local disappearance of species and in a precarious existence for those able to survive. Forest remnants are affected by a continuous degradation caused by edge effects and by the invasion and activities of the few species that are favored by these changes. Reproductive success of individuals of forest species may be affected by these circumstances. However, information is scanty regarding this. Birds consitute the most diverse group of vertebrates in tropical rain forests and their survival is seriously afected by the transformation of tropical landscapes by man. Thus, the aim of this project, conducted in a landscape of los Tuxtlas, Veracruz, Mexico, is to determine predation patterns in artificial nests in four vegetation types: virgin forest, forest-pasture edge, vegetation corridor along a stream, and live fence formed by the planting of live posts of two tree species. Experimental design included three replicates per each vegetation type. At each site we placed on the ground along a sinuous transect, and at intervals of 50m, 10 nests with three chicken eggs each and 10 nests with three plasticine eggs each. Plasticine eggs were used to determine, by examination of markings, the general identity of the predator. Survival of both types of eggs was monitored for seven days at each site. The experiment was repeated three times in a five month period during 2000. Inicial results indicate that the lowest and slowest nest predation rates were in the virgin forest tract. Iimportant nest predators were birds, mammals and possibly reptiles. We assess aditional conservation problems suggested by such results. Results of this study can be found in Biological Conservation, 2002 106 (2): 199-209

Feeding ecology of black howler monkeys in Calakmul, Campeche, Mexico (Graduate thesis in progress). ECOSUR-Chetumal, Quintana Roo, Mexico.


Manuel Oñorbe. Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Academic Internship, Los Tuxtlas Jan-June 2003.

 


ATTITUDES AND PERCEPTION OF RURAL INHABITANTS OF LOS TUXTLAS ABOUT THE CONSERVATION OF WILD PRIMATES AND TROPICAL RAIN FORESTS (abstract soon in English)

La deforestación, causada principalmente por la introducción de tierras agrícolas, ganaderas, por la extracción de madera, el crecimiento poblacional, y la apertura de nuevos caminos, ha provocado una reducción significativa de las superficies selváticas en la región. Tal reducción ha resultado, por un lado, en la extinción local de especies de mamíferos como los primates, representados estos por monos araña y aulladores. Por el otro lado, las selvas remanentes han quedado reducidas a fragmentos aislados de diferentes taños y con diferentes historias de manejo. En algunos de estos existen poblaciones de primates que en muchos casos viven bajo condiciones ecológicas y demográficas precarias que las ponen bajo riesgo. Ante tal problemática, se pretende hacer un diagnóstico en tres comunidades rurales en la región de los Tuxtlas, Veracruz, acerca de como perciben los pobladores la pérdida de la selva y de los primates que la habitan. Nos interesa conocer las posibles diferencias entre adultos y niños de edad escolar y entre hombres y mujeres de la población adulta y también determinar si existe una relación con respecto al nivel socio-económico de las comunidades. Para conocer la percepción de los habitantes, aplicamos dos encuestas diferentes: uno dirigido a la población de edad escolar y otro a la población adulta. Esperamos que los resultados nos proporcionen las herramientas necesarias para diagnosticar las actitudes de estas poblaciones y así promover escenarios de conservación de las selvas incorporando programas de educación ambiental que favorezcan un aprovechamiento razonable de los recursos selváticos para beneficio de las comunidades

 


Ana Ibarra M. División Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Juárez Autónoma de Tabasco. piayana@primatesmx.com Comparative study of the avifauna of two traditional cocoa plantations in La Chontalpa region in Tabasco, México.

In the state of Tabasco in southern Mexico, it has been estimated that only about 2% of the area of original tropical rain forests exists in the form of small and scattered fragments. As a consequence of this human-induced transformation, many bird species are found in areas managed for agriculture, cattle ranching, logging and urban settlements. In some Neotropical regions, traditional agroecosystems such as shaded coffee and cocoa may conserve some original components of the avian community of the forest. However, lack of sufficient studies difficult the evaluation of the value of these man-made habitats for the conservation of avian populations. The present study is a contribution in this direction and it is aimed at describing avian communities present in a typical agroecosystem in Tabasco, traditional cocoa growing. In a year-long study, 84 avian species were recorded in two 3.5 ha cocoa plantations. Twenty four percent of the species recorded were Neotropical migrants. In spite of the great similarity in the composition and structure of the vegetation between both sites, 46% of the bird species recorded were in one of the two plantations, indicating an important additive effect between plantations. Among the principal factors wich may favour the existence of the high diversity of bird species detected at the plantations investigated are the floristic richness, vertical heterogeneity of the vegetation and associated food resources.


 

Adrián Mendoza R. Departamento de Biología, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. admendoza@primatesmx.com Survey of the population of the Black Howler monkey (Alouatta pigra) in the fragmented ladscape surrounding the Mayan site of Palenque, Chiapas, México. The two species of howler monkeys existing in Mexico are Alouatta palliata and A. pigra. The first has a broad geographic distribution in México and in Central Amérca. However, A. pigra has a restricted geographic distribution in southern México and this primate is an endemic species to the Mesoamerican region. Our knowledge regarding aspects of population, ecology, behavior and conservation for this species is particularly poor. Such void of information is the case for populations existing in extensive areas of rain forest as well as for those existing under fragmented conditions in Mesoamerica. What kind of differences exist between populations inhabiting extensive forests and those in fragmented habitats in population parameters such as size, demographic structure, crude density, ecological density, etc., it is something that has not been documented for the species. This project, a complement to that of Lucía Castellanos (see above) with the same species in the forest of the Mayan site of Palenque, attempts to gather information on the above population parameters for the population of A. pigra inhabited forest fragments in a 10 km perimeter around the Mayan site. Preliminary surveys in some forest fragments around the site indicate the local extinction of the species and the presence of isolated troops. These are, on average, smaller than those detected at the Mayan site and displayed al altered demographic structure.We hope this study will provide information to enrich our understanding of the demographic responses of A. pigra to the fragmentation of its habitats by human activity. We hope the information will be useful to provide recommendations for the conservation of the howler monkey population existing in the landscapes surrounding the Mayan site of Palenque.


Tana Barrueta Rath

Graduate student Colegio de la Frontera Sur - ECOSUR - Chiapas

Tana Barrueta Rath. Graduate Student, Colegio de la Frontera Sur, Chetumal, Quintana Roo, Mexico. tanabrath@primatesmx.com

  • Demographic survey and diet of Alouatta pigra and Ateles geoffroyi at El Tormento, Campeche, Mexico (Master´s thesis).
  • Genetic variation, gene flow and paternity in a population of Alouatta pigra in Campeche, Mexico(Ph.D Dissertation in progress)

 


Sarie Van Belle, Departament of Biology, University of Gent, Ghent, Bélgica. sarievanbelle@primatesmx.com Conservation biology of tropical rain forest mammals with special emphasis on wild primates in Los Tuxtlas (Veracruz), Palenque (Chiapas) and Calakmul Biosphere Reserve (Campeche), Mexico. Academic Internship (2001-2002). Conservation and study of tropical biodiversity is fundamental to sustain a balanced environemnt world wide. Tropical rain forests harbour an important genetic pool of plant and animal species, but many segments of this gene pool have disappeared locally and many others are at risk as a result of land-managment practices incompatible with a rational use of tropical rain forest resources. The wild primates of tropical rain forests are among the most conspicuous animal components in these habitats and their existence is fundamental in the life of the forest. They participate, through their foraging activities, in the cycling of matter, nutrient and energy and many of them act as important seed dispersal agents, contributing to the reproductive strategy of a broad spectrum of plant species and to the natural process of rain forest regeneration. The conservation of wild primates at the northernmost representation of the Amazon rain forest in southern Mexico is an iimportant contribution to the above problem. I am involved in such task by helping Dr. A. Estrada and his research team in surveying and monitoring populations of howler and spider monkeys in areas in southern Mexico such as Los Tuxtlas (Veracruz), Comalcalco (Tabasco), Palenque (Chiapas), Calakmul (Campeche) and in other sites in the Yucatán peninsula.

Academic Internship Feb-July 2003. Use of non invasive techniques in the study of hormones and behavior in wild populations of primates (click here for details of this project)


 

Reyna Pacheco Olvera

Biología, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

  • Tropical rain forest conservation and perception of local inhabitants (Undergrad thesis)
  • Seed dispersal by howler monkeys and tropical rain forest restoration (Master`s thesis)


Alejandra Duarte

National School of Anthropology (Mexico City)

  • Traffic and hunting of wild primates
  • Primate pet-human relations

Primates as Pets in Mexico City: an Assessment of Species Involved, Source of Origin and General Aspects of Treatment.  Large human populations found in cities are an important source of demand for wildlife as pets, including primates and not much is known about the primate species involved, their general origin, the length of time they are pets and about some of the maintenance problems as pets. We report here the results of a survey conducted in Mexico City among primate pet owners aimed at providing some of the above information. Using an ethnographic approach, pet owners were treated as informants to gain his/her trust bringing us into their homes where we learned about the life of their primate pets. We surveyed 179 cases of primate pet ownership and results indicate the use of 12 primate species. Of these, three were native species (Ateles geoffroyi, Alouatta pigra and A. palliata). The rest were other neotropical primate species not present in Mexico and some Paleotropical species. Spider monkeys and the two species of howler monkeys present in Mexico accounted for 67% and 15% of the primate cases investigated, respectively. The most expensive primate pets were those from abroad, while the least expensive were the Mexican species. About 45% of the native primate pets were obtained by owners in a large market in Mexico city and the rest were obtained in southern Mexico. While providing companionship for children and adults, primate pets are subjected to a series of vicissitudes, some of which put their lives at risk. The demand by city dwellers of primate pets exerts an important pressure, along with habitat destruction and fragmentation, on wild populations in southern Mexico.


Yasminda García del Valle, División Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Juárez Autónoma de Tabasco. monayasmi@primatesmx.com Use of food resources by a free-ranging troop of howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata) in the Yumká Park, Tabasco.

The state of Tabasco in southern Mexico harbors representatives of the three species of wild primates that exist in Mexico: Alouatta palliata, A. pigraand Ateles geoffroyi. As a result of human activity a great proportion of the habitats of these three primates have disappeared or exist in a fragmented condition. Data on the natural history, ecology and behavior of these primate species is practically non existent for the state. This project attempts to contribute to this void of information by investigating the feeding ecology of a troop of A. palliata living in a 32 ha forest fragment located in the Yumká zoological park, about 15 miles from the city of Villahermosa. We hope that the information being gathered will enrich our data banks on the feeding ecology of the species in Tabasco. Such information is fundamental to understand the adaptational flexibility of members of the species to extreme conditions of habitat reduction and isolation. Such information will be useful as well in the design of conservation measures for segments of the remnant populations of Alouatta existing under similar conditions in other areas of Tabasco.

Use of non invasive techniques in the study of genetic variation and gene flow in wild population of primates in southern Mexico (see details by clicking here). Graduate thesis (ECOSUR-San Crtistóbal de la Casas, Chiapas, Mexico).


Joseph Hawes, Biologist, Nottingham University (UK) joe_hawes@hotmail.com Academic Internship March-August 2003.

Having completed my bachelor’s degree in biology I decided to join the primate research group at Los Tuxtlas to gain further field experience of practical research and conservation methods, with a view to post-graduate study. I am particularly interested in animal behaviour and ecology with my focus here being the role of howler monkeys in seed dispersal, and their potential importance in the regeneration of a fragmented landscape. A parallell aim of mine is to encourage involvment by the local communities in the research, conservation and regeneration of the forest, and to learn about their use of forest resources and their environmental education programs. In addition, as part of this research team, I participate in projects researching aspects of population genetics and parasite loads through non-invasive faecal collection, and projects collecting information on the population parameters of the three species of primate found in southern Mexico. I hope my contribution will help to enhance the current data banks, and to improve our understanding of the rainforest sytem.


David Muñoz Zetina, División Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Juárez Autónoma de Tabasco. aullador@primatesmx.com Activity patterns of a free-ranging troop of howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata) in the Yumká Park, Tabasco.

This project is one of a number of field studies for the first time conducted in the state of Tabascoon the ecology and behavior of howler monkeys. The state of Tabasco in southern Mexico harbors representatives of the three species of wild primates that exist in Mexico: Alouatta palliata, A. pigra and Ateles geoffroyi. As a result of human activity a great proportion of the habitats of these three primates have disappeared or exist in a fragmented condition. Data on the natural history, ecology and behavior of these primate species is practically non existent for the state. The principal aim of this project is to document the activity patterns and patterns of use of space of a troop of A. palliata existing in a small (32 ha) tract of rain forest, located on the grounds of the Yumká zoological park, 15 miles from the city of Villahermosa. We hope the information collected will contribute to the void of information on the behavior and ecology of Alouatta in Tabasco, that it will improve our understanding of the flexibility of response by howler monkeys to fragmentation and isolation of their natural habitat, and that it will provide some guidelines for the design of conservation scenarios for other isolated segments of populations of howler monkes in Tabasco.

Feeding ecology of a population of howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata) living in a cacao plantation in Tabasco, Mexico. Graduate thesis. ECOSUR- San Crsitobal de las Casas, Chiapas, Mexico. click here for project


 

Berenice Franco G.

Graduate Program ECOSUR-Campeche, Mexico

  • Ecology, behavior and conservation of wild primates in Veracruz and Tabasco
  • Genetic variaton and distances in two black howler monkey populations in Campeche, Mexico


Petra Wilbrink, Wageningen University, Holanda., Petra.Wilbrink@wur.nl. Academic Internship Feb-July 2003.

My name is Petra Wilbrink from Wageningen University in the Netherlands. I am a biology student, interested in population ecology of animals. With my internship at Los Tuxtlas I hope to increase my knowledge on the ecological system of the tropical forest and learn a lot about working with primates. With the research team I am participating in several projects concerning primate populations. We are using noninvasive techniques to collect samples to answer questions on genetic diversity, hormones and parasites of wild primates and we are gathering data on population densities of howler monkeys and spider monkeys in Los Tuxtlas and other parts of south-east Mexico. Besides this, we observe the monkeys to answer questions on their participation in seed dispersal and forest regeneration. Knowledge about primates and their function in the ecological web of the tropical forest will help to get a better understanding of the importance of conservation. Effective methods can be developed to help to conserve these animals and their habitat. By assisting in gathering this knowledge I hope to add to the efforts done to conserve the tropical forest and its inhabitants.


 

Eugenio Fuentes Pech, División Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Juárez Autónoma de Tabasco. saraguato@primatesmx.com Use of food resourses by free-ranging howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata) at the La Venta Park, Villahermosa, Tabasco, Mexico.

The howler monkeys of the Mesoamerican region, Alouatta palliata and Alouatta pigra, have not escaped the destruction and fragmentation of their natural habitat by human activity, resulting in the local and regional extinction of both species. Such situation predominates in the state of Tabasco, where about 80% of the tropical rain forest has been converted to pastures or has given way to industrial development and oil exploration. Our knowledge of the ecology and behavior of the two howler species in this area of the Mesoamerican region is practically non existent. Similarly our data banks about the responses of Alouatta to habitat loss, fragmentation and isolation are particularly scanty. Both types of information are indispensable, no only to enrich our data banks on the natural history of the species, but also to design conservation scenarios that will avoid the continued disappearance of remnant populations. This project attempts to contribute to such void of information by studying the feeding ecology of a free-ranging troop of howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata) existing in a forest patch located on the grounds of the zoological park of La Venta in the city of Villahermosa, Tabasco, Mexico. Such extreme conditions of artificiality will allow us to document how howlers monkeys have adapted to an isolated habitat that exists in the middle of a large urban area.


 

Carlos Jímenez Arano, División Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Juárez Autónoma de Tabasco. desmodus@primatesmx.com Preliminary study of activity patterns in bats using an ultrasound detector in a tropical landscape at Los Tuxtlas, Mexico.

Members of the order Chiroptera are of particular importance in Neotropical rain forests because they constitute about 40-50% of mammal species, greatly influencing the species richness and diversity of mammals in these ecosystems. It has been suggested that bat tolerance to habitat loss and fragmentation may be related to an ability to traverse open areas to reach other forest fragments or other vegetation types and use resources within the matrix. However, documentation of use of habitats in the fragmented matrix in man-modified Neotropical landscapes is scanty and has been limited to trapping bats with mist nets and/or traps. Hence, we still lack information on the intensity of use by bats of the habitats investigated. To contribute to this void of information, we measured bat activity with an ultrasound detector in a landscape in the northeastern section of the region ofr Los Tuxtlas in southern Mexico. Bat activity was monitored in the following habitats: continuous forest, a forest fragment, a forest edge, a forest corridor, a linear strip of vegetation, a citrus grove, a pasture and in the vegetation present in a local village. We hope that the information collected will increase our understanding of bat responses to changes in the distribution of their natural habitat caused by human activity. Such information may also be useful in the design of conservation scenarios that could help preserve bat communities in the Neotropics.


Yenit Decena C. División Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Juárez Autónoma de Tabasco. yenitdc@primatesmx.com General activity patterns and use of space in howler monkeys (Alouatta palliata) at La Venta, Villahermosa, Tabasco.

The howler monkeys of the Mesoamerican region, Alouatta palliata y A. pigra, have not espcaped the destruction and fragmentation of their natural habitat caused by human activity. This has resulted in the local extinction of the two species and in the existence of fragmented and isolated populations that are at risk. Such situation is predominant in the state of Tabasco, México. In addition, the information available on the basic ecology and behavior as well as conservation status of the two howler monkey species is practically non existent. Similarily, documentation of the responses of Alouatta to fragmentation and degradation of its natural habitat is even more sparse. Such information is indispensable, not only to build our data banks on the species of interest, but also to assess the ecological plasticity of each species. Such information may provide the tools to develop conservation scenarios to stop the continued local and regional disappearance of Alouatta. This project aims at contributing information in such direction. We are interested in documenting the general activity patterns and patterns of use of space by a troop of howlers (A. palliata) existing in a forest fragment that forms part of Parque-Museo La Venta, located in the city of Villahermosa, Tabasco. This study is a complement to that by Eugenio Fuentes (see abstract below). Both investigations will allow us to document the adaptations of howler monkeys to a habitat under extreme conditions of isolation. The study will provide important information about these primates that will be useful to promote public interest in the conservation of the the wild primates of the state of Tabasco.

 

 

 

 

 


Martha Marleny Rosales Meda

Biologist, Universidad de San Carlos, Guatemala

Wild primates of Guatemala: Population, Ecology, Behavior, Conservation

Thesis project:Population study and conservation status of howler monkeys (Alouatta pigra) at the reserve of Lachúa, Guatemala

 


Alma Mendoza P. Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Thesis project: The role of dung beetles as secondary dispersal agents of seeds dispersed by howler monkeys inhabiting forest fragments in Los Tuxtlas, Mexico.


 

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