Primate Anthrozoology in Action: Inclusive, Multisectoral Conservation and Knowledge Co-production in Brazil’s Atlantic Forest
Date
2025
Authors
Daly, Gabriela Bezerra de Melo
Silva, Emanuely
Soares, Pedro Paulino
Queiroz, Zaqueu Sílvio
Bastos, Alexandre F. Lima
Gomes, Maurício Talebi
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ORCID
Type
Poster Presentation
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Abstract
The critically endangered southern muriqui (Brachyteles arachnoides) offers a compelling case for decolonial and multisectoral conservation and research. This work presents the institutional experience of the ProMuriqui Institute, a Brazilian NGO co-led by university-affiliated researchers and long-term local partners, combining academic rigor and inclusive conservation, in the largest remaining fragment of the Atlantic Forest. We summarized 25 years of conservation and research strategies, funding records, and stakeholder collaborations. The analysis was organized around six operational pillars: (1) Long-term research; (2) Forest protection; (3) Educational outreach; (4) Capacity-building with local actors; (5) Policy making; and (6) National and international institutional partnerships. Our model integrates different spheres. (1) Decades of longitudinal monitoring and research on wild muriqui populations. Recently, we co-launched the Primate Anthrozoology Research Program (PARP) to foster global dialogue and comparative research on human–primate relations. (2) Habitat expansion via land acquisition supported by diverse funding (i.e., corporate, governmental, and philanthropic). The Institute owns 102 hectares of forested land—known as the Muriqui Ecopark—which functions as a green corridor for multiple species. (3) Educational activities—including guided responsible primate-watching, lectures, appearances on TV shows, and student involvement—promote awareness while generating revenue. (4) Capacity building through cross-institutional training, volunteer programs, and scientific dissemination. Local field assistants are employed long-term to preserve place-based ecological knowledge. (5) ProMuriqui contributes to strategic species action plans (e.g., National Action Plans), and (6) it collaborates with Carlos Botelho State Park to align NGO efforts with public policy, while key researchers hold academic appointments at Brazilian and international universities. Our next step is planning participatory eco-monitoring with neighboring Indigenous communities (Tupi-Guarani Mbyá). Our experience highlights the role of locally embedded NGOs and diverse collaboration models in shaping international research and policy frameworks, especially in biodiversity hotspots where human and nonhuman lives are deeply intertwined.
Description
Keywords
Southern muriquis, Decolonial Conservation, Human-Primate Interaction, ProMuriqui Institute, Primate Anthrozoology, Carlos Botelho State Park
Citation
Bezerra de Melo Daly, G., Silva, E., Soares, P. P., Queiroz, Z. S., Bastos, A. F. L., & Gomes, M. T. (2025). Primate anthrozoology in action: Inclusive, multisectoral conservation and knowledge co-production in Brazil’s Atlantic Forest. Paper presented at the International Society for Anthrozoology Conference (ISAZ), Canada.