Why This Book on Amazonian Mammals Is Needed.- Xenarthrans of Brazilian Amazon: Recent Discoveries, Knowledge Gaps, and Conservation Concerns.- Biodiversity and Conservation of Bats in the Brazilian Amazonia - With a Review of the Last 10 Years of Research.- Primates of Brazilian Amazonia: Knowledge, Research Gaps and Conservation Priorities.- Claws and Fangs: Carnivore Abundance and the Conservation Importance of Amazonia.- Mammalian Megafauna: A Cross-continental Comparison in Research Output.- Amazonian Aquatic Mammals: Existing Knowledge, Current Threats and Future Studies.- Historical Commercial Hunting of Mammals in Amazonia.- Subsistence Hunting and Wild Meat Trade.- Management of Subsistence Hunting of Mammals in Amazonia: A Case Study in Loreto, Peru.- Showing and Saving: The Challenges and Opportunities of Mammal-based Tourism in Brazilian Amazonia.- Large-scale Land-use Changes and the Amazonian Mammal Biota.- Habitat Fragmentation Impacts on Amazonian Non-volant Mammals.- Bat Responses to Anthropogenic Forest Fragmentation: Insights from an Amazonian Fragmentation Experiment in Brazil.- Infectious Diseases: A Threat to the Conservation of Amazonian Mammal Species.- Mining Impacts on Aquatic Mammals of the Brazilian Amazon.- Chapter Effects of Anthropogenic Climate Change on Ecosystems and Biodiversity, Especially on Amazonian Mammals.- Conservation Strategies for Mammals in Brazilian Amazonia: Future Studies at Local, Regional and Global Scales.
Wilson R. Spironello has published nearly 70 peer-reviewed articles
and book chapters, and has peer-reviewed for journals with ecology
and conservation focus. He has a degree in Ecology from
Universidade Estadual Paulista Julio de Mesquita Filho, Brazil, and
PhD in Biology from University of Cambridge, England. He is
currently a researcher at National Institute of Amazonian Research
- INPA, in the Brazilian Amazon. In a 40-year research career in
the Amazon, his studies have included plant ecology, ecology and
management of timber species, primate ecology, and the ecology and
population monitoring of medium and large terrestrial and arboreal
mammals. He was president of the Brazilian Society of Primatology
from 2014-2015.
Adrian A. Barnett has co-edited two previous multi-author mammal
conservation books, has published nearly 150 peer-reviewed articles
and book chapters, has acted as editor on a special issue of
American Journal of Primatology, and peer-reviewed for 38 academic
journals. He has a degree in Zoology from Oxford and a PhD in
primatology from Roehampton University, England. He is currently a
member of the ecology and botany departments at the National
Institute of Amazonian Research - INPA, Manaus, AM. He has worked
in the Brazilian Amazon for 30 years and had published on the
ecology and conservation of primates, rodents, aquatic mammals and
bats of the region.
Jessica W. Lynch is a Professor at University of California, Los
Angeles in the Institute for Society and Genetics and Department of
Anthropology, where she teaches courses on Amazonia in the
Anthropocene; Human-Animal Interactions; and Primate Genetics,
Ecology and Conservation. She received her Ph.D. in
Biological Anthropology at University of Wisconsin, Madison. She is
a member of the IUCN Primate Specialist Group and Editor-In-Chief
for the journal Neotropical Primates. Lynch’s expertise centers on
the evolution of behavioral and morphological diversity in mammals
in the Americas. Her research focuses most strongly on
understanding the diversity within capuchin monkeys (Sapajus and
Cebus), and incorporates phylogenomic and biogeographic
analyses.
Paulo Estefano D. Bobrowiec is a bat researcher at the National
Institute for Amazonian Research (INPA) and the Biological Dynamics
of Forest Fragments Project (BDFFP) who has published over 60
peer-reviewed articles and book chapters. He undertook a BSc in
Biological Sciences at the Federal University of Uberlândia, a PhD
in Genetics, Conservation and Evolutionary Biology, both at INPA,
and a second PhD in Zoology at the Federal University of Amazonas.
He has worked in the Brazilian Amazon for 22 years and his main
area of expertise is bat ecology, community structure and
conservation (forest fragmentation and dams flooding).
Sarah A. Boyle has conducted research on the behavior, ecology, and
conservation of Amazonian mammals, with a focus on non-human
primates, for the past 20 years. She has published more than 50
scientific articles and book chapters. She has a degree in
Anthropology from the College of William and Mary, Virginia, USA
and a PhD in Biology from Arizona State University, Arizona, USA.
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