Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/16076
Title: One hundred and thirty-five years of avifaunal surveys around Santarém, central Brazilian Amazon
Authors: Lees, Alexander C.
Moura, Nárgila Gomes de
Andretti, Christian Borges
Davis, Bradley J.W.
Lopes, Edson Varga
Magalli Pinto Henriques, L.
Aleixo, Alexandre
Barlow, Jos
Ferreira, Joice Nunes
Gardner, Toby Alan
Keywords: Avifauna
Biological Survey
Documentary Source
Geographical Distribution
Land Use
New Species
Ornithology
Range Expansion
Species Diversity
Species Inventory
Amazonia
Belterra
Para [brazil]
Santarem [para]
Issue Date: 2013
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Revista Brasileira de Ornitologia
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 21, Número 1, Pags. 16-57
Abstract: We present an updated annotated avifaunal checklist for the Santarém region of central Pará state, Brazil, an area that has one of the oldest histories of ornithological exploration in South America. We combine data from a fivemonth quantitative survey of the birds of the municipalities of Santarém and Belterra (east of the Tapajós River) between 2010 and 2011 with an exhaustive search of material in museum collections worldwide and digital vouchers deposited online. Our own survey sampled habitats across a gradient of disturbance ranging from 'undisturbed' primary forest, through logged and burnt forest, patches of secondary forest, cattle pastures and intensive mechanized agriculture. Given the potential for species misidentifications in avian inventories, we paid special attention to obtaining voucher documentation. Here we present a collection of publicly accessible digital vouchers for all of the new species, in addition to providing museum catalogue numbers for all old records. We added 24 species to the regional list, principally species associated with anthropogenic land-uses, but also including seven species restricted to primary forest habitats which were missed from both recent published inventories and over the course of two centuries of intensive collecting efforts. The regional list now stands at 583 species for which voucher documentation is available, with an additional 26 undocumented species. Many of the species reported here are poorly known or represent notable range extensions, and we present new data on their status and distribution.
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