估计墨西哥非法灵长类动物贸易的影响:对野生动物的潜在威胁

IF 1.2 4区 生物学 Q2 ZOOLOGY
Zaira Esparza-Rodríguez, Colin A. Chapman, Adrián Reuter, Sonia Gallina-Tessaro, Wesley Dáttilo, Juan Carlos Serio-Silva
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要:墨西哥的灵长类动物阿鲁瓦塔、阿鲁瓦塔和阿鲁瓦塔正受到栖息地丧失、破碎化和非法狩猎和贸易的严重威胁。人们对非法贸易的程度及其对灵长类动物数量下降的影响知之甚少。我们的研究提出了一种潜在的方法,基于估计在交易中被发现之前死亡的个体数量和那些可能无法被发现的个体数量。这有助于估计被提取的动物数量,并可以评估贩运对其种群的影响。我们从2010年至2019年在墨西哥缉获的灵长类动物数据中得出了估计。为此,我们根据现有文献(科学文章、新闻文章和笔记)创建了野生动物检出率和死亡率,以估计在捕获、运输和销售过程中死亡的灵长类动物数量,以及未被墨西哥当局发现的被贩运灵长类动物数量。我们估计每年有946只灵长类动物被从野外移走用于宠物贸易(蜘蛛猴= 854;黑吼猴Alouatta pigra = 38,披风吼猴Alouatta palliata = 54)。人口贩运导致的年人口规模减少最大的是geoffroroyi(2.2%),其次是Alouatta pigra(1.3%)和Alouatta palliata(0.4%)。我们的估计显示了走私对墨西哥灵长类动物种群的影响百分比。然而,贸易有可能影响不断减少的人口,仍然必须加以解决。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Estimating the impact of the illegal trade of primates in Mexico: a potential threat to wildlife
Abstract The primates of Mexico, Ateles geoffroyi , Alouatta palliata , and Alouatta pigra , are seriously threatened by habitat loss, fragmentation, and illegal hunting and trade. Very little is known about the extent of illegal trade and its impacts on declining primate populations. Our study proposes a potential method based on estimating the number of individuals that die in the trade before being detected and those that probably cannot be detected. This facilitates estimating the number of animals extracted and allows an assessment of how trafficking impacts their populations. We derive estimates from seizure data of primates in Mexico between 2010 and 2019. To do this, we created wildlife detection rates and mortality rates from the existing literature (scientific articles, journalistic articles, and notes) to estimate the number of primates that die during capture, transport, and sale and the number of trafficked primates that were not detected by Mexican authorities. We estimate that 946 primates were removed from the wild for the pet trade each year (spider monkey Ateles geoffroyi = 854; black howler monkeys Alouatta pigra = 38, mantled howler monkey Alouatta palliata = 54). The annual reduction in population size caused by trafficking was greatest for Ateles geoffroyi (2.2%), followed by Alouatta pigra (1.3%), and Alouatta palliata (0.4%). Our estimates show the percentage of impacts that trafficking has on Mexican primate populations. Nevertheless, trade has the potential to impact declining populations and still must be addressed.
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来源期刊
Folia Primatologica
Folia Primatologica 生物-动物学
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
10.50%
发文量
36
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Recognizing that research in human biology must be founded on a comparative knowledge of our closest relatives, this journal is the natural scientist''s ideal means of access to the best of current primate research. ''Folia Primatologica'' covers fields as diverse as molecular biology and social behaviour, and features articles on ecology, conservation, palaeontology, systematics and functional anatomy. In-depth articles and invited reviews are contributed by the world’s leading primatologists. In addition, special issues provide rapid peer-reviewed publication of conference proceedings. ''Folia Primatologica'' is one of the top-rated primatology publications and is acknowledged worldwide as a high-impact core journal for primatologists, zoologists and anthropologists.
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