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Dive into the research topics where Gerson Buss is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerson Buss.


Neotropical Primates | 2007

Power Lines and Howler Monkey Conservation in Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

Luisa Xavier Lokschin; Rodrigo Cambará Printes; Juliane Nunes Hallal Cabral; Gerson Buss

libidinosus) use anvils and stone pounding tools. Am. J. Primatol. 64: 359–366. Moura, A. C. A. and Lee, P. 2004. Capuchin stone tool use in Caatinga dry forest. Science 306: 1909. Ottoni, E. B. and Mannu, M. 2001. Semifree-ranging tufted capuchins (Cebus apella) spontaneously use tools to crack open nuts. Int. J. Primatol. 22: 347–358. Schick, K. D., Toth, N., Garufi, G., Savage-Rumbaugh, E. S., Rumbaugh, D. and Sevcik, R. 1999. Continuing investigations into the stone tool-making and tool-using capabilities of a bonobo (Pan paniscus). J. Archaeol. Sci. 26: 821– 832. Tomasello, M. and Call, J. 1997. Primate Cognition. Oxford University Press, New York. Urbani, B. 1999. Spontaneous use of tools by wedgecapped capuchin monkeys (Cebus olivaceus). Folia Primatol. 70: 172–174. Urbani, B. and Garber, P. A. 2002. A stone in their hands... Are monkeys tool users? Anthropologie 40: 183–191. van Schaik, C. P., Deanes, R. O. and Merrill, M. Y. 1999. The conditions for tool use in primates: Implications for the evolution of material culture. J. Hum. Evol. 36: 719–741. van Schaik, C. P., Ancrenaz, M., Borgen, G., Galdikas, B., Knott, C. D., Singleton, I., Suzuki, A., Utami, S. S. and Merrill, M. 2003. Orangutan cultures and the evolution of material culture. Science 299: 102–105. Visalberghi, E. 1990. Tool use in Cebus. Folia Primatol. 54: 146–154. Visalberghi, E. 1997. Success and understanding in cognitive tasks: A comparison between Cebus apella and Pan troglodytes. Int. J. Primatol. 18: 811– 830. Waga, I. C., Dacier, A. K., Pinha, P. S. and Tavares, M. C. H. 2006. Spontaneous tool use by wild capuchin monkeys (Cebus libidinosus) in the Cerrado. Folia Primatol. 77: 337–344. Westergaard, G. C. and Suomi, S. J. 1994. The use and modification of bone tools by capuchin monkeys. Curr. Anthropol. 35: 75–77. Westergaard, G. C. and Suomi, S. J. 1995. The manufacture and use of bamboo tools by monkeys: Possible implications for the development of material culture among east Asian hominids. J. Archaeol. Sci. 22: 677– 681. Westergaard, G. C., Greene, J. A., Babitz, M. A. and Suomi, S. J. 1995. Pestle use and modification by tufted capuchins (Cebus apella). Int. J. Primatol. 16: 643–651. Power Lines and Howler Monkey conservation in Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil


Iheringia Serie Zoologia | 2010

Primatology in southern Brazil: a transdisciplinary approach to the conservation of the brown-howler-monkey Alouatta guariba clamitans (Primates, Atelidae)

Leandro Jerusalinsky; Fernanda Zimmermann Teixeira; Luisa Xavier Lokschin; Andre Chein Alonso; Márcia M. A. Jardim; Juliane Nunes Hallal Cabral; Rodrigo Cambará Printes; Gerson Buss

Human interventions in natural environments are the main cause of biodiversity loss worldwide. The situation is not different in southern Brazil, home of five primate species. Although some earlier studies exist, studies on the primates of this region began to be consistently carried out in the 1980s and have continued since then. In addition to important initiatives to study and protect the highly endangered Leontopithecus caissara Lorrini & Persson, 1990 and Brachyteles arachnoides E. Geoffroy, 1806, other species, including locally threatened ones, have been the focus of research, management, and protection initiatives. Since 1993, the urban monkeys program (PMU, Programa Macacos Urbanos) has surveyed the distribution and assessed threats to populations of Alouatta guariba clamitans (Cabrera, 1940) in Porto Alegre and vicinity. PMU has developed conservation strategies on four fronts: (1) scientific research on biology and ecology, providing basic knowledge to support all other activities of the group; (2) conservation education, which emphasizes educational presentations and long-term projects in schools near howler populations, based on the flagship species approach; (3) management, analyzing conflicts involving howlers and human communities, focusing on mitigating these problems and on appropriate relocation of injured or at-risk individuals; and finally, (4) Public Policies aimed at reducing and/or preventing the impact of urban expansion, contributing to create protected areas and to strengthen environmental laws. These different approaches have contributed to protect howler monkey populations over the short term, indicating that working collectively and acting on diversified and interrelated fronts are essential to achieve conservation goals. The synergistic results of these approaches and their relationship to the prospects for primatology in southern Brazil are presented in this review.


Primate Conservation | 2010

The Urban Monkeys Program: A Survey of Alouatta clamitans in the South of Porto Alegre and Its Influence on Land use Policy between 1997 and 2007

Rodrigo Cambará Printes; Gerson Buss; Márcia M. A. Jardim; Marcos de Souza Fialho; Sidnei da S. Dornelles; Marco Perotto; Luis F. G. Brutto; Elisa Girardi; Leandro Jerusalinsky; Marcus Vinicius Athaides Liesenfeld; Luisa Xavier Lokschin; Helena Piccoli Romanowski

Abstract: Endemic to the Atlantic Forest, the southern brown howler monkey, Alouatta clamitans, can still be found in forest fragments in the metropolitan area of Porto Alegre, the capital of the state of Rio Grande do Sul, in the south of Brazil. The Urban Monkeys Program (UMP) has been monitoring their numbers since 1994. Here we report on the results of the initial surveys carried out from 1994 to 1996 and discuss the variables that are determining the loss or survival of the howler monkey groups. We also examine how our results have influenced the politics of land use over the last ten years (1997–2007). Porto Alegre has an area of 47,630 ha. About 30% is a rural/urban matrix and the remainder is entirely urban. There are 44 hills in the municipality and all have been affected by human occupation and activities. We overlaid a grid on a map 1/50,000, with quadrates of 1 km2 divided into four quadrates of 500 m2 each. We surveyed all the quadrates that contained forest. The presence of howler monkeys was recorded by direct observation, the presence of feces, and by their vocalizations. Complementary information was obtained by talking to the local people. We used a field protocol to record the absence or presence of howlers, habitat quality and the extent and type of human disturbance or use. We surveyed 5,125 ha and found howler monkeys in 2,921 ha (57%). The physiognomy, altitude and connectivity with forest in other quadrates were the three predictors of the presence of howler monkeys. Reasons for this include the fact that human use for such as agriculture, cattle breeding, housing estates, and roads is more concentrated in the lowlands than in the more hilly areas. Our findings suggest that the brown howler monkeys of Porto Alegre live as a meta-population. We participated in forums to discuss land use and management decisions. UMP influenced the creation of 895 ha of municipal protected areas over the 10 years. UMP initiated a civil enquiry concerning problems of the electrocution of howler monkeys using power lines. Two years after, as a result, the Rio Grande do Sul State Electricity Company insulated the cables in the areas where they presented a hazard. In 2002, a bill of amendment was passed (municipal law no 482/99), which provided for tax exemption for landowners who conserve natural areas or use their land for agriculture. Our recommendations for the future include: 1) maintenance of the current rural matrix in the south of Porto Alegre; 2) the creation of the “Morro São Pedro Natural Park”; 3) the establishment of a federal strategy for primate conservation in urban areas in Brazil; and 4) the inclusion of a criterion concerning human population density in the areas of occurrence for the threatened categories of the IUCN Red List.


Revista Biociências | 2015

O bugio que habita a mata e a mente dos moradores de Itapuã - Uma análise de percepção ambiental no entorno do Parque Estadual de Itapuã, Viamão, RS

Gerson Buss; Helena Piccoli Romanowski; Fernando Becker


Biodiversidade Brasileira | 2018

Primatas da Reserva Biológica do Lago Piratuba, Amapá, Brasil: ocorrência, conflitos e ameaças / Primates of the Lago Piratuba Biological Reserve, state of Amapá, Brazil: occurrence, conflicts and threats

Eduardo Marques Santos Júnior; Gerson Buss; Renata Bocorny de Azevedo; Leandro Jerusalinsky; Marcelo Derzi Vidal


Biodiversidade Brasileira | 2018

Primatas do Parque Nacional do Jamanxim/PA: riqueza, distribuição e ameaças / Primates of the Jamanxim National Park: richness, distribution and threats

Gerson Buss; André L. Ravetta; Marcos de Souza Fialho; Rafael Suertegaray Rossato; Ricardo Sampaio; Rodrigo Cambará Printes; Liliam Patrícia Pinto; Leandro Jerusalinsky


Biodiversidade Brasileira | 2018

Abundância e densidade de primatas na Reserva Biológica do Gurupi, Maranhão, Brasil / Abundance and primate density in Gurupi Biological Reserve, Maranhão, Brazil

Gerson Buss; Marcos de Souza Fialho; Leandro Jerusalinsky; Renata Bocorny de Azevedo; Sandro Leonardo Alves; Marcelo Derzi Vidal; Eloisa Neves Mendonça


Archive | 2015

O bugio que habita a mata e a mente dos moradores de Itapuã - Uma análise de percepção ambiental no entorno do Parque Estadual de Itapuã, Viamão, RS The howler monkey that inhabits the forest and the mind of Itapuã residents - An analysis of environmental perception in the surroundings of the Itapuã State Park, Viamão, RS

Gerson Buss; Helena Piccoli Romanowski; Fernando Becker


Archive | 2008

Distribuição do bugio-ruivo (alouatta clamitans cabrera, 1940) na região Centro-sul de Porto Alegre, RS.

Mariele dos Santos Lopes; Fernanda Zimmermann Teixeira; Gerson Buss; Luisa Xavier Lokschin


Archive | 2006

Projeto Macacos Urbanos - Etapa 2 : estudo da ocorrência e distribuição do Bugio-ruivo (Alouatta Guariba Clamitans; Cabrera, 1940) na análise da ecologia de paisagem da Lomba do Pinheiro, Porto Alegre, RS

Luisa Xavier Lokschin; Robberson Bernal Setubal; Fernanda Zimmermann Teixeira; Gerson Buss

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Helena Piccoli Romanowski

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Leandro Jerusalinsky

Federal University of Paraíba

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Rodrigo Cambará Printes

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Márcia M. A. Jardim

Universidade Federal de Pelotas

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Fernanda Zimmermann Teixeira

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Andre Chein Alonso

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Fernando Becker

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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André L. Ravetta

Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi

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Fernanda Pozzan Paim

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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