Scientific activism to protect the world's primates and their environments from extinction: Introduction to the special issue

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY(2024)

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摘要
Nonhuman primates and their habitats are facing an impending extinction crisis. Approximately 69% of primate species are listed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as threatened and 93% have declining populations. Human population growth (expected to reach 10.9 billion by the year 2100), the unsustainable demands of a small number of consumer nations for forest-risk commodities, deforestation and habitat conversion, the expansion of roads and rail networks, cattle ranching, the hunting and trapping of wild primate populations, and the potential spread of infectious diseases are among the primary drivers of primate population decline. Climate change will only exacerbate the current situation. The time to act to protect primate populations is now! In this special issue of the American Journal of Primatology, we present a series of commentaries, formulated as "Action Letters." These are designed to educate and inform primatologists, conservation biologists, wildlife ecologists, political leaders, and global citizens about the conservation challenges faced by particular primate taxa and particular world regions, and present examples of specific actions that one can take, individually and collectively, to promote the persistence of wild primate populations and environmental justice for local human populations and impacted ecological communities. As scientists, researchers, and educators, primatologists are in a unique position to lead local, national, and international efforts to protect biodiversity. In this special issue, we focus on primates of the Brazilian Amazon, lemurs of northeast Madagascar, Temminck's red colobus monkey (Piliocolobus badius temminckii), night monkeys (Aotus spp.), long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis), the primate pet trade, and professional capacity building to foster conservation awareness and action. We encourage primatologists, regardless of their research focus, to engage in both advocacy and activism to protect wild primate populations worldwide. Summary of the main drivers of primate population decline, a call for primatologists to engage in scientific activism to promote primate population persistence, and a list of actions that global citizens can be taken in support of primate conservation.Research Highlights image As scientists, researchers, and educators, primatologists are in a unique position to engage in scientific activism and lead local, national, and international efforts to protect the world's primates. Saving primates from extinction must be a core component of our professional responsibilities and actions. Protecting vulnerable primate populations is a public good that requires new, more innovative, and more effective solutions
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关键词
activism,advocacy,collective action,conservation,public policy
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