Abstract

This report is the first installment of a monographic study of mammalian diversity and ethnomammalogy in a sparsely inhabited rainforest region between the Yavarí and Ucayali rivers in northeastern Peru. Our study is based on several large collections of mammals (totaling about 3500 specimens) made at various localities in this region between 1926 and 2003, and on our long-term ethnobiological and linguistic fieldwork with the Matses, a Panoan-speaking group of indigenous Amazonians who still obtain most of their dietary protein by hunting mammals. Our primary objectives are to document the species richness of the regional fauna through taxonomic analysis of collected specimens, and to assess the detail and accuracy of Matses knowledge of mammalian natural history by linguistic analysis of recorded interviews.The regional primate fauna is definitely known to consist of at least 14 species documented by collected specimens and/or repeated sightings of taxa with visually conspicuous diagnostic traits. This fauna includes three atelids (Alouatta seniculus, Ateles belzebuth, Lagothrix lagothricha), eight cebids (Aotus nancymaae, Callimico goeldii, Callithrix pygmaea, Cebus albifrons, Cebus apella, Saguinus fuscicollis, Saguinus mystax, Saimiri sciureus), and three pitheciids (Cacajao calvus, Callicebus cupreus, Pithecia monachus). All 14 species are known to occur sympatrically at one inventory site, but Goeldi's monkey (Callimico goeldii) is rare and uakaris (Cacajao calvus) seem to be patchily distributed, so some local faunas may have only 12 or even fewer species. This regional fauna is unique because neighboring interfluvial regions lack some species that are present in the Yavarí-Ucayali interfluve, and because some species that are present in neighboring interfluvial regions are not known to occur between the Yavarí and the Ucayali.Matses knowledge about primate natural history is clearly correlated with size and cultural importance. For example, information obtained from standardized interviews about spider monkeys (Ateles belzebuth, a large game species) can be parsed into 86 observations about its ecology and/or behavior, whereas interviews about pygmy marmosets (Callithrix pygmaea, a small nongame species) contain only nine observations on these topics. Item-by-item comparisons of Matses observations about spider monkeys with the published results of scientific field research suggests that the Matses are generally accurate observers of primate natural history, a conclusion that is additionally supported by comparing community patterns of resource use compiled from our interview data with community-ecological studies of primate faunas in the scientific literature. Most exceptions (discrepancies between Matses observations and the scientific literature) can be explained by cultural inattention to small nongame species.Although these results suggest that archiving native Amazonian knowledge about mammalian natural history might be a cost-effective alternative to lengthy fieldwork for some research objectives, there are significant linguistic barriers than can inhibit effective cross-cultural communication. Among the Matses, these include a surprisingly large number of zoologically redundant names (synonyms and hyponyms). Relevant primate examples are discussed in substantive detail.

Highlights

  • South of the Amazon and west of the Rio Madeira is one of the largest remaining tracts of intact lowland rain forest on the planet

  • We summarize information about cultural importance, hunting methods, folk beliefs, folk taxonomy, and other ethnological information gleaned from our fieldwork with the Matses under the Ethnobiology heading

  • Morphological material that we examined from the YavarıUcayali interfluve falls within the range of phenotypic variation present in large comparative series of typical seniculus from northern Colombia; in the absence of any compelling data to the contrary, we conclude that the populations in question are conspecific, and that juara is a synonym of A. seniculus

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

South of the Amazon and west of the Rio Madeira is one of the largest remaining tracts of intact lowland rain forest on the planet. The establishment of a forestry research station near the town of Jenaro Herrera on the right bank of the Ucayali in the late 1960s provided a base of operations for faunal research that resulted in an early primate inventory (Aquino, 1978), descriptions of several new species of rodents and marsupials (Pacheco, 1991; Malygin et al, 1994; Solari, 2007), the first published list of bats from the Yavarı-Ucayali interfluve (Ascorra et al, 1993), and various ecological publications (e.g., Gorchov et al, 1993; Fleck and Harder, 1995) Substantial collections from this locality were made over several decades by mammalogists from the Museo de Historia Natural de la Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos (MUSM). All of our collections from Nuevo San Juan, totaling 1145 specimens, are preserved at the AMNH and the MUSM

Ethnobiological Methods
DISCUSSION
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69. Eat Myristicaceae fruits
Findings
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