The Woolly Monkey 2014
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4939-0697-0_10
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Ranging Behaviour, Daily Path Lengths, Diet and Habitat Use of Yellow-Tailed Woolly Monkeys (Lagothrix flavicauda) at La Esperanza, Peru

Abstract: The yellow-tailed woolly monkey ( Lagothrix flavicauda) is Critically Endangered and endemic to a small area of the Andean forest in northern Peru. I collected data on the home ranges, daily path lengths, diet and habitat use of two groups of L. flavicauda. Group follows took place at La Esperanza, Amazonas department, for 15 months between October 2009 and February 2011. The study site comprised a matrix of disturbed primary and regenerating secondary cloud forest. Home ranges were between 95 and 147 ha using… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(13 citation statements)
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References 49 publications
(44 reference statements)
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“…Using a maximum home range estimate of 174 ha from published estimates from our survey site [41], we generated a buffer of ~ 10 home range diameters (10,000 m), giving a 37,860 ha polygon around the survey site, an area of ~ 218 home ranges (Fig. 3).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Using a maximum home range estimate of 174 ha from published estimates from our survey site [41], we generated a buffer of ~ 10 home range diameters (10,000 m), giving a 37,860 ha polygon around the survey site, an area of ~ 218 home ranges (Fig. 3).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pope [1989, cited in Di Fiore et al [40] recorded un-equal dispersal distances for male and female Alouatta seniculus of between one and six home range diameters. We calculated the area of low possible influence using a 10 km circular buffer around all transects, based on ~ 7 home range diameters of L. flavicauda groups from published data recorded at the study site [41]. Similarly, we calculated an area of probable influence of 800 m, ~ 2 home range diameters.…”
Section: Forest Cover Change Mappingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Large-mammal assemblages are less species rich and have lower densities with increasing altitude. Elephants and tapirs drop out of TMF with altitude (Steinmetz et al 2008), there are fewer primate species at upper elevations in African (Goodman & Rasolonandrasana 2001, Marshall et al 2005, Asian (Caldecott 1980, Grow et al 2013 and South American TMF (Almeida-Neto et al 2008, Geise et al 2004, Shanee 2009, 2014, and fewer fruit bats in TMF in the Philippines , Peruvian Andes (Patterson et al 1996) and oceanic Africa (Goodman & Rasolonandrasana 2001). Primates (Grow et al 2013), fruit bats and birds (Figure 4) are all generally smaller bodied at high altitudes.…”
Section: Faunal Compositionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…En bosques montanos, aun conociendo la existencia de otras especies de primates, los estudios fueron orientadas a L. flavicauda (Leo Luna 1980, 1982, 1984, 1987, Butchart et al 1995, Cornejo 2007, Shanee et al 2007a, Shanee 2011, 2014, Shanee & Shanee 2011a) y A. miconax (Butchart et al 1995, Cornejo et al 2008, Shanee & Shanee 2011b, 2013a, Shanee et al 2013b), la mayoría de ellos conducidos en las regiones de Amazonas y San Martín, y están referidos principalmente a aspectos ecológicos, tamaño de grupo, distribución geográfica, entre otros; para el resto de especies, no existe información sobre los aspectos mencionados, salvo los registros de su presencia, en particular de A. belzebuth en la Cordillera de Colán (Mittermeier et al 1975), Santa Rosa cerca al Abra Patricia (Shanee et al 2007b), Yambrasbamba, Copallin y Paujil (Shanee et al (2013a) y recientemente los reportes sobre diversidad y abundancia de primates en Huánuco (Aquino et al 2015(Aquino et al , 2017 y San Martín (Aquino et al 2017).…”
Section: Introductionunclassified