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Navegando por Assunto "Primatas"

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    Efeito da monocultura da palmeira de dendê (Elaeis guineensis Jacq.) sobre a fauna de primatas na Amazônia Oriental
    (Universidade Federal do Pará, 2016-04-25) MINEIRO, Ivo Gabriel Barros; OLIVEIRA, Ana Cristina Mendes de; http://lattes.cnpq.br/1199691414821581
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    Impactos de mudanças climáticas e desmatamento na distribuição geográfica de Cebus kaapori (Primates: Cebidae) na Amazônia
    (Universidade Federal do Pará, 2018-04-02) GOMES, Letícia Braga; FREDERICO, Renata Guimarães; http://lattes.cnpq.br/3156181119549976; OLIVEIRA, Ana Cristina Mendes de; http://lattes.cnpq.br/1199691414821581
    Climate change and deforestation are among the greatest threats to biodiversity. In the Amazon, the establishment of Protected Areas is an important tool to reduce the negative impacts of these threats, favoring the protection of biodiversity. Amazonia holds the largest number of primates in the world. Primates are highly sensitive to forest loss and habitat modification, which directly threatens the survival of their populations. The Ka’apor Capuchin Cebus kaapori is considered the rarest and most threatened primate species in the Amazon, and is classified as Critically Endangered by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature. Here, we evaluated the impacts of climate change and deforestation on Cebus kaapori distribution area. We modeled the distribution of the species under current and future (2050) climates and overlapped these models with established protect areas as well as current forest cover and that expected for 2050 in two different economic scenarios acoording to a land-use model. We found that climate change might lead to up to 97% of loss of climatic suitable area for Cebus kaapori within the next 30 years. The situation worsens when considering current forest loss and future deforestation projections, both under a governance scenario and in under the business-as-usual scenario. We show that the restricted distribution of Cebus kaapori, coupled with likely high reduction in suitable areas for species occurrence, low coverage in protected areas and fragmentation of potential adaptive areas for occurrence in the future, might reduce species’ populations to an unviable level of survival in nature.
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    Modelo experimental para indução de hemiparkinsonismo por 6-hidroxidopamina em primatas sapajus apella e avaliação das alterações motoras
    (Universidade Federal do Pará, 2019-06-09) LEAL, Leon Claudio Pinheiro; KREJČOVÁ, Lane Viana; http://lattes.cnpq.br/2604693973864638; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8016-5283; BAHIA, Carlomagno Pacheco; http://lattes.cnpq.br/0910507988777644; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3794-4710
    Parkinson's disease is currently the second most common neurodegenerative disease in the world, with a high incidence in North and South America and Europe, for more than 50 years we have not seen any revolutionary treatment for the disease and many aspects of its neuropathology that still remain without a concrete enlightenment, in this feeling the experimental model in primates approaches the human reality are invaluable value for the development of new therapies and elucidation on mechanisms related to the disease. The 6-hydroxydopamine model in primates is a model that mimics some motor symptoms characteristic of PD. The present study aimed to develop a protocol for the induction of HemiParkinsonism in Sapajus apella primates. Three Sapajus Apella monkeys, all adult males, were submitted to daily conditioning sessions using the positive reinforcement clicker technique for primate chair positioning. Concurrently, the staircase and Brinkman tray motor tests were performed to determine laterality by the manual preference and dominance attributes. After this period, two 6-OHDA induction protocols were performed, the first protocol was injected into 10 sites in the nucleus striatum and the second protocol was injected into 10 sites in the nigrostriatal pathways, one week after the injections were performed twelve weeks of clinical analysis . All animals learned the input and positioning behaviors in the chair in a minimum of 30 sessions using pure positive reinforcement. The results of the staircase test demonstrated that the animals presented laterality consistent with the assignments of manual preference and dominance. The Brinkman test, specifically, presented lower sensitivity for determination of the same attributes, despite being the most commonly used test. Clinical analysis revealed that the second induction protocol had more motor symptoms characteristic of PD. Induction by 6-OHDA in the nigrostriatal pathways has been shown to be a good induction method for treatment studies and for a better understanding of the disease.
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    Sistema social do macaco-de-cheiro (Saimiri collinsi) em cativeiro
    (Universidade Federal do Pará, 2015-03-30) MAGALHÃES, Tatyana Pinheiro; LOPES, Maria Aparecida; http://lattes.cnpq.br/3377799793942627
    Most primates live in groups. Despite the advantages, this type of social organization can also increase competition for resources intragroup. The priority access to these resources is linked to dominance hierarchy. The hierarchical positions and social relationships influence the quality of life, for example, changing the reproductive and immune systems. This study characterizes the social hierarchy of the squirrel monkeys, Saimiri collinsi in captivity and examines the influence of intrinsic attributes in the hierarchy. Describes the intragroup associations networks and the relations between associations and the hierarchy and reproductive behavior. Furthermore, describes the care with offspring (parental and alloparental care) and addresses the association between mothers and allomothers in and out of care with offspring period. The results showed that dominance structure of S. collinsi is a partial hierarchy and that it is influenced by the age and body size. The association networks are formed based on sex classes and are not made for age, age-classes, or rank. The associations appear to be related to female power resistance to males sex advances. Moreover, allomothers included females with and without offspring and the association between mothers and allomothers was no different inside and outside of care with infants period.
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