A Proposal from Save the
Golden Lion Tamarin
Save the Golden Lion Tamarin is a 501(c)3 registered
non-profit organization(EIN 20-2874701 and DUNS 60-387-3659).
Its mission is to support the conservation work of the
Associação Mico-Leão Dourado (AMLD- the Golden Lion Tamarin
Association) in Brazil. AMLD is the premier NGO protecting
species and expanding wildlife habitat for one of the most
endangered and unique forests on earth – the Atlantic Forest.
Denise Rambaldi, Secretary General
(Executive Director) Associação Mico-Leão Dourado; 1998
Muriqui Prize from the National Council of the Atlantic Forest
(Mata Atlântica) Biosphere Reserve, UNESCO/Man and Biosphere
Program; Chair, Southeast Region Committee and Board Member of
the Atlantic Forest Biosphere Reserve, UNESCO MaB; Member of
IBAMA (Brazilian federal government) International Committee
for the Conservation and Management of Lion Tamarins, IBAMA
Committee for the Conservation and Management of Callitrichid
primates, IUCN/Species Survival Commission Primate Specialist
Group, and São João Watershed Committee.
Lou Ann Dietz, formerly Senior Program
Officer for the Atlantic Forest Ecoregion, World Wildlife
Fund, currently Independent Consultant in Building Capacity
for Conservation Results; President, Save the Golden Lion
Tamarin; Member of the Board of Directors, Associação
Mico-Leão Dourado; Member, IBAMA (Brazilian government)
International Committee for the Conservation and Management of
Lion Tamarins; 2001 World Wildlife Fund World of Difference
Award in recognition of her role in increasing the wild
population of golden lion tamarins from 200 to 1,000.
Devra Kleiman, formerly Assistant
Director for Research, Smithsonian National Zoological Park;
currently Independent Consultant; Adjunct Professor,
University of Maryland; Senior Scientist Emeritus, Smithsonian
National Zoological Park; Section Chair, North America,
IUCN/SSC Re-introduction Specialist Group; Coordinator for the
Golden Lion Tamarin, IBAMA (Brazilian government)
International Committee for the Conservation and Management of
Lion Tamarins; Vice-President, Save the Golden Lion Tamarin;
1988 Distinguished Service Award, Society for Conservation
Biology.
James Dietz, Professor of Biology,
University of Maryland; Co-Director, University of Maryland
Graduate Program in Sustainable Development and Conservation
Biology; Principal Investigator for National Science
Foundation - supported field research on golden lion tamarins
in Brazil, 1983 to present; Associate Research Scientist,
Smithsonian National Zoological Park; Member, IBAMA (Brazilian
government) International Committee for the Conservation and
Management of Lion Tamarins, Board of Directors of Save the
Golden Lion Tamarin and Associação Mico-Leão Dourado.
Save the Golden Lion Tamarin is at www.savetheliontamarin.org
and the Associação Mico-Leão Dourado is at www.micoleao.org.br.
SavingSpecies.org, a collective of
senior conservation professionals, strongly recommends this
proposal. Their vision statement is enclosed.
Executive Summary
The Associação Mico-Leão
Dourado (the Golden Lion Tamarin Association) seeks
funds to purchase 140 hectares of mixed forest and cattle
pasture adjacent to União Biological Reserve (REBIO União), an
already existing federal protected area in the State of Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil.
The total asking price for the 140
hectares is US$333,000, and we believe that various people and
organizations would be prepared to contribute to this
purchase.
We believe that we have an excellent
chance of getting funding from IUCN Netherlands, from a land
purchase program called Purchase for Nature. They grant up to
85,000 euros (= US$117,000), leaving us with $216,000 to fund.
We further believe that funding a substantial piece of this —
say $50,000 would provide us excellent leverage to obtain the
remaining funds.
SavingSpecies.org, a collective of
senior conservation professions that evaluates practical
conservation actions, “strongly recommends” this purchase.
They consider it to have a very high potential to save many
species from extinction. Moreover, they estimate that this
purchase will “soak up” carbon equivalent to that emitted by a
minimum of 35 average Americans and do so for about thirty
years.
The most famous of the species that
depend on this purchase is the golden lion tamarin
(Leontopithecus rosalia
) — the only primate to have
temporarily escaped extinction after being successfully
reintroduced into the wild. There are currently about 1500
golden lion tamarins in the wild, but the reintroduction
program has been halted because of the lack of additional
forest into which to put more animals. Purchase of this land
would enable forest to re-grow connecting the isolated forests
of REBIO União to nearby forest patches and so allow the
tamarin population to expand and unite.
SavingSpecies.org estimates that 15
species of birds considered at risk of extinction by the IUCN
Red List occur in REBIO União. As with the tamarins,
connecting the small, isolated populations to others nearby is
the best way to ensure their survival.
International
significance
The purchase we
propose is of considerable international significance.
Conservation scientists understand that species extinctions
are geographically very concentrated. Two major factors are
the loss of natural habitat — some areas have lost far more
than others — and the less obvious fact that some species are
very much more vulnerable to extinction than are others.
Professor Norman Myers defines areas to be “hotspots” on the
basis of there being a sufficient number of “endemic” plants —
those with small geographical ranges — and having lost at
least 80% of the natural vegetation. This proposal is within
the Atlantic Coastal Forest hotspot, the fourth (of 25) most
highly ranked in the world on the basis of its ~8000 endemic
plants and ~600 endemic vertebrates.
Myers’ idea can be geographically
refined for well-known groups such as birds and mammals. The
map on the previous page at the top left shows the
distribution of bird species that have smaller than the median
(50th percentile) range size. It is essentially a map of the
vulnerable species. The top right shows the original area of
tropical forest (red) and the area that now remains (green).
The map at the bottom left shows the Atlantic Coastal Forest
hotspot colored by the number of endemic bird species. The
combination of massive forest loss and high endemism gives
this region the dubious distinction of having the largest
numbers of threatened birds species (as defined by the IUCN)
in the New World.
The 3D map below shows this area in
considerable detail. Only areas with remaining vegetation
cover are colored — much of this area is deforested — and the
colors reflect the numbers of threatened bird species likely
to be found. Clearly, the mountaintops have more forest cover,
but they have fewer species. Lowland forest is very scarce and
highly fragmented. The areas with the greatest number of
threatened species, (in red), and the cattle pasture we wish
to purchase are to the east. Simply, we wish to protect an
area that likely has the greatest number of threatened bird
species, in all of the Americas
.

We predict that the following
threatened species might be found in these lowland patches:
Lipaugus lanioides Cinnamon-vented Piha (VU for
“vulnerable” according to IUCN), Leucopternis lacernulata
White-necked Hawk (VU), Platyrinchus leucoryphus
Russet-winged spadebill (VU), Thripophaga macroura,
Striated softail Procnias nudicollis Bare-throated
bellbird (VU), Calyptura cristata Kinglet Calyptura
(CR for “critically endangered")), Hemitriccus
furcatus Fork-tailed Tody-Tyrant (EN for “endangered”),
Onychorhynchus (coronatus) swainsoni (EN),
Amazona rhodocorytha Red-browed Parrot (EN),
Myrmotherula urosticta Band-tailed Antwren (EN),
Xipholena atropurpurea White-winged Cotinga (EN),
Pyrrhura cruentata Blue-throated Parakeet (VU),
Myrmotherula minor Salvadori's Antwren (VU),
Carpornis melanocephalus Black-headed Berryeater
(VU), Claravis godefrida Purple-winged Ground-Dove
(EN), Sporophila falcirostris), Tangara
peruviana
Black-backed Tanager (VU).


The top figure above shows an aerial
photograph of the proposed acquisition, with the photograph
below it showing the view across the gap from the yellow
arrow.
Below we show the area (red circle)
from a greater distance. REBIO União is isolated from the
forest to the west and, on its other side, the original forest
has been almost completely removed. Isolated forests — even as
large as this one — lose species over time because they are
too small to maintain viable populations. The biological
objective of this proposal is to connect União to the forests
to the west by buying additional forest and, particularly, the
cattle pasture that isolates it.

The map at left illustrates the
regional objective. Very little lowland forest remains within
coastal Brazil, one of the most biologically important regions
of the planet. Within the immediate area, there are three
forested areas, the first two of which are protected reserves:
União, Poço das Antas, and Morro do São João. The last of
these, the remains of an ancient volcano, is very isolated
from other forests by farmlands. A major highway, BR101,
separates Poço das Antas from other forest and splits União,
but connecting the larger, western portion of União is
practical.
In fact, our primary concern has not
only been with birds, but with the Golden Lion Tamarin
(Leontopithecus rosalia
). The IUCN Red List entry reads:
“Leontopithecus
rosalia was assessed as Critically Endangered in
1996 and 2000. It has now been downgraded to Endangered
as a result of nearly thirty years of conservation
efforts, including the establishment of a new population
through translocation to a new protected area, the União
Biological Reserve.
The wild population is now estimated
to be around 1,500. One-third of the population arises from a
reintroduction program. The remainder is in forest fragments,
the largest of which are Poço das Antas and União Biological
Reserves. A stable, managed population is held in captivity at
about 490 animals. There is little room for expansion for the
wild population, however, because of the extreme fragmentation
and reduction of the forest cover within its range.
Current and future conservation efforts are attacking this
problem with reforestation and the establishment of
corridors
” (our
italics).
By extension, these lowland forest
remnants are likely to be priorities not just for birds and
mammals, but also for a huge variety of threatened plants and
animals about which we know very little. As one of the last
remaining patches of lowland forest in a hotspot with 8,000
endemic plants, it is quite probable that it holds the remnant
populations of dozens, perhaps hundreds of species.
The Golden Lion Tamarin
Association
The Golden Lion Tamarin Association
(or the Associação Mico-Leão-Dourado, AMLD) was formed in
Brazil in November 1992 to administer and implement the Golden
Lion Tamarin Conservation Program. Previously administered by
Dr. Devra Kleiman and her colleagues at the Smithsonian's
National Zoological Park, leadership of the Conservation
Program was shifted to Brazil to consolidate administrative
duties nearer to the center of the conservation action and to
turn authority for the program over to local conservationists
within the range country.
Save the Golden Lion Tamarin is a
501c(3) non-profit established in the U.S. to support the
AMLD’s conservation efforts in Brazil. Save the Golden Lion
Tamarin will be responsible for transferring the funds from
the U.S. to the AMLD who will purchase the land and
immediately transfer it to the Brazilian federal government
agency IBAMA for incorporation into REBIO União, a Brazilian
federal biological reserve. IBAMA is responsible for and
competent to guarantee the long-term management and protection
of the reserve.
A brief history of the
negotiations
The total asking price for the 140
hectares is US$333,000. Initially, the hope was to buy a much
smaller piece of land — essentially the pasture that separates
REBIO União from the forests to the west. Its owner, Sr.
Gouveia, decided that this would split his farm into two
pieces and he preferred to sell a larger section. His asking
price for the entire property is R$5,000 per hectare (= US
$2,400 per hectare, or a little over $1,000 per acre). This is
consistent with the present market prices for the region.
There are smaller areas to the north of REBIO União, which
would connect the reserve to other forest fragments, but the
Gouveia parcel is by far the most strategically important.
Potential for
recovery
The area of pasture is surrounded on
most sides by forest. We think it is likely that the natural
process of succession would quickly cause this area to be
occupied by fast-growing Cecropia
trees. Following in their
shade should grow longer-lived tropical hardwood species,
though we could always enhance this process by planting native
seedlings. Several local nurseries, including a community
nursery with which the Golden Lion Tamarin Association works
closely, are producing native tree seedlings.
Long-term stability
Brazil is one of the few tropical
primate range countries where one can enter into a secure land
purchase. The land we seek to purchase will be managed by the
Brazilian government environment agency as an extension of
REBIO União; so its long-term protection is assured. But what
of the lands adjacent to it? In areas of active logging, there
is always a worry that in protecting one area of forest,
logging operations will simply move elsewhere and there will
be no net protection. However, the areas in this region are
not being actively logged. Moreover, landowners are forbidden
by Federal Law (Atlantic Forest Law, 11.428, 2006) to cut more
forest (primary or in medium and advanced stages of
regeneration) and are obligated by the Federal Forest Code
(Law 4.771, 1965) to maintain 20% of their property as forest
as well as to maintain forest along streams and on steep
inclines. (This partly explains why there is so much
fragmented forest in this area; however, enforcement of this
law has been erratic in the past). Furthermore, the purchase
of land in the lowlands will connect REBIO União to forest on
steeper hillsides that are not normally cut in any case.
Potential for Carbon
sequestration
As can be seen from the aerial
photograph, about half the land already has forest and is
continuous with the reserve. However, roughly half the area is
deforested - about 70 hectares. As the supporting document
from SavingSpecies.org explains, 70 hectares of regenerating
forest will “soak up” the carbon used by the at least 35
average Americans — and continue to do so for roughly thirty
years.
----------------------------------
TO CONTRIBUTE:
Save the Golden Lion Tamarin is at www.savetheliontamarin.org and the
Associação Mico-Leão Dourado is at www.micoleao.org.br. (Websites will open in a new browser window)
TO SUBMIT A PROPOSAL:
Click here to visit our page for prospective organizations