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Featured researches published by Ricardo Sampaio.


International Journal of Primatology | 2009

A New Subspecies of Saguinus fuscicollis (Primates, Callitrichidae)

Fabio Röhe; José de Sousa e Silva; Ricardo Sampaio; Anthony B. Rylands

Saddleback tamarins (Saguinus fuscicollis, S. melanoleucus, and S. tripartitus) occur in the upper Amazon, west of the rios Madeira and Mamoré–Guaporé to the Andes. They currently comprise 13 species and subspecies in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. Here we report on a previously undescribed subspecies of Saguinus fuscicollis from the interfluvium of the lower rios Madeira and Purus in the central Amazon of Brazil. It is a distinct form with a very pronounced mottling on the back giving the appearance of a saddle, a characteristic shared by the 3 species, and the reason for their collective common name. The lack of a white superciliary chevron and its highly mottled ochraceous-dark brown to black saddle that extends from the scapular region to the base of the tail distinguish the new taxon from Saguinus fuscicollis weddelli. The latter characteristic also distinguishes it from another saddleback tamarin (Saguinus fuscicollis ssp.) that has been reported immediately to the south of its range in the same interfluvium. We compare pelage coloration, external characters and craniometric measurements with its geographically closest relatives, Saguinus fuscicollis weddelli and S. f. avilapiresi, and indicate its probable geographic distribution in a small area between the rios Madeira and Purus, just south of the Rio Amazonas.


Primates | 2015

Re-description and assessment of the taxonomic status of Saguinus fuscicollis cruzlimai Hershkovitz, 1966 (Primates, Callitrichinae)

Ricardo Sampaio; Fabio Röhe; Gabriela M. Pinho; José de Sousa e Silva-Júnior; Izeni P. Farias; Anthony B. Rylands

Cruz Lima’s saddle-back tamarin Saguinus fuscicollis cruzlimai Hershkovitz, 1966, was described from a painting by Eládio da Cruz Lima in his book Mammals of Amazonia,Vol. 1, Primates (1945). The painting was of four saddle-back tamarins from the upper Rio Purus, one of them distinct and the inspiration for Hershkovitz to describe it as a new subspecies. Its exact provenance was unknown, however, and the specimen was lost. Surveys in the Purus National Forest in 2011 resulted in sightings of this tamarin along the north bank of the Rio Inauini, a left-bank tributary of the middle Purus, and also on the left bank of the Purus, north and south of the Rio Inauini. It is possible that it extends north as far as the Rio Pauini, and that S. f. primitivus Hershkovitz, 1977, occurs north of the Pauini as far the Rio Tapauá, both also left-bank tributaries of the Purus. Morphometric and molecular genetic analyses and the coloration of the pelage indicate that this tamarin differs from its neighbors sufficiently to be considered a full species. In his doctoral dissertation [2010, Taxonomy, Phylogeny and Distribution of Tamarins (Genus Saguinus Hoffmannsegg, 1807) Georg-August Universität, Göttingen], C. Matauschek found that saddle-back and black-mantle tamarins diverged from the tamarin lineage around 9.2 million years ago; time enough to warrant their classification in a distinct genus. Leontocebus Wagner, 1840, is the first name available. In this article we re-describe Cruz Lima’s saddle-back tamarin. We propose a neotype with a precise locality, and make it a full species in the genus Leontocebus.


Mammalia | 2010

New distribution limits of Bassaricyon alleni Thomas 1880 and insights on an overlooked species in the Western Brazilian Amazon

Ricardo Sampaio; Daniel P. Munari; Fabio Röhe; André L. Ravetta; Paulo Rubim; Izeni P. Farias; Maria Nazareth F. da Silva; Mario Cohn-Haft

No abstract available


Studies on Neotropical Fauna and Environment | 2011

Reassessment of the occurrence of the kinkajou (Potos flavus Schreber, 1774) and olingo (Bassaricyon beddardi Pocock, 1921) in the northern Brazilian Amazon

Ricardo Sampaio; Maria Nazareth F. da Silva; Mario Cohn-Haft

Brazils only records of Pococks olingo (Bassaricyon beddardi) are based on sightings from the northernmost state of Roraima, where the similar kinkajou (Potos flavus) was reported as absent. Our recent field work in the region led to the collection of two specimens and several more observations of kinkajous and a complete lack of evidence of the presence of olingos. Furthermore, the name used locally to describe the nocturnal procyonids previously treated as olingos, gogó de sola, refers to the leathery bare throat patch that we believe to be a characteristic unique to kinkajous. Thus, we conclude that previous records of olingos in Roraima represent misidentifications of kinkajous and recommend that, until supported by a specimen, B. beddardi be treated as absent from Brazil.


Mammalia | 2018

Diversity of primates and other mammals in the middle Purus basin in the Brazilian Amazon

Ricardo Sampaio; Fabio Röhe; Anthony B. Rylands

Abstract Information on the wildlife of the middle and upper reaches of the Purus in Brazil is scarce, and this region is one of the major remaining gaps in our understanding of the distributions and population status of mammals in the Brazilian Amazon. In this paper, we present information on the diversity of mammals of the middle Purus, in the south of Amazonas State, Brazil. Based on rapid inventories in four protected areas, and line-transect censuses in one of them, we provide locality records that indicate expansions of the known range of six primate species and a squirrel. Species more frequently seen during censuses were small and mid-sized primates and rodents, while records of larger mammals, which are more sensitive to subsistence hunting, were infrequent or lacking. Deforestation in the area is relatively low, but the area is close to the so-called “arc of deforestation” that is moving north and west from the north of the state of Mato Grosso into the states of Acre and Amazonas. The middle and upper Purus basin has been little explored, but is far from pristine, and populations of most of the species that are vulnerable to forest degradation and hunting are already reduced, especially close to the major rivers.


Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society | 2016

Taxonomic review of the New World tamarins (Primates: Callitrichidae)

Anthony B. Rylands; Eckhard W. Heymann; Jessica W. Lynch Alfaro; Janet C. Buckner; Christian Roos; Christian Matauschek; Jean P. Boubli; Ricardo Sampaio; Russell A. Mittermeier


Primates | 2018

New insights into the distribution and conservation status of the Golden-White Tassel-Ear Marmoset Mico chrysoleucos (Primates, Callitrichidae)

Felipe Ennes Silva; Whaldener Endo; José de Sousa e Silva Júnior; Marcelo A. dos Santos Junior; Ricardo Sampaio; Fábio Röhe


Biodiversidade Brasileira | 2018

Primatas do Parque Nacional do Viruá, Roraima, Brasil / Primates of Virua National Park, Roraima, Brazil

Renata Bocorny de Azevedo; Marcos de Souza Fialho; Marcelo Derzi Vidal; Rafael Suertegaray Rossato; Ricardo Sampaio; Fabio Röhe


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


Neotropical Primates | 2013

Atualização do Conhecimento Sobre o Sauim-De-Cara-Suja, Saguinus weddelli (Primates, Callitrichinae), no Estado De Rondônia

Almério Câmara Gusmão; Marcella Alves Crispin; Sandro Leonardo Alves; Kurazo Mateus Okada Aguiar; Ricardo Sampaio; José de Sousa e Silva Júnior

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André L. Ravetta

Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi

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Izeni P. Farias

Federal University of Amazonas

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Ednaldo Cândido Rocha

Universidade Federal de Viçosa

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Fábio Röhe

Federal University of Amazonas

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Gabriela M. Pinho

Federal University of Amazonas

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Gerson Buss

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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