Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics, Animal Science and Zoology, Environmental Science
20
Scopus Publications
464
Scholar Citations
10
Scholar h-index
10
Scholar i10-index
Scopus Publications
Arboreal Camera Trap-based Insights into the Activity, Resource Use, and Demography of Black Lion Tamarins (Leontopithecus chrysopygus) and Sympatric Mammals in Atlantic Forest Fragments Daniel Angelo Felippi, Maria Carolina Rodella Manzano, Paolla Nicole Franco, Vinícius José Alves Pereira, João Vitor Medeiros Teixeira, João Pedro Fernandes Machado, Gabriela Cabral Rezende International Journal of Primatology, 2026 Wildlife monitoring is essential for guiding biodiversity conservation strategies, particularly in fragmented ecosystems under intense anthropogenic pressure. While noninvasive methods, such as camera traps, are widely used for terrestrial species, their application in other forest strata is underexplored despite its potential for studying elusive and nocturnal arboreal mammals. We aim to evaluate whether arboreal camera trapping is a relevant tool for monitoring the endangered black lion tamarin ( Leontopithecus chrysopygus ) and other sympatric arboreal and scansorial mammals in two Atlantic Forest remnants in Pontal do Paranapanema, São Paulo, Brazil. With 27 cameras in the lower and mid-canopy (0.5–8.0 m) and 9,872 camera-days, we recorded 1,316 independent video events representing seven species of mammal. Arboreal camera traps provided robust estimates of diel activity patterns, resource partitioning, and demographic dynamics, including the development of one tamarin infant and one juvenile over time. They also revealed interspecific sharing of sleeping sites and nest boxes, emphasizing the role of these structures in supporting both diurnal and nocturnal species. By documenting community-wide temporal niche partitioning, our study demonstrates how arboreal and scansorial mammals segregate activity in time when sharing the same arboreal structures. Overall, our results show that arboreal camera traps are relevant, noninvasive tool that simultaneously capture species-specific behavior, community-level interactions, and demographic information, highlighting their value for primatology, biodiversity monitoring, and integrative conservation planning in human-modified tropical forests.
Vocalizations Reveal Species Differences in Endangered Lion Tamarins (Primates, Callitrichidae) Maria Carolina Rodella Manzano, Ricardo J. Sawaya, Gabriela Cabral Rezende, Maria Luisa da Silva American Journal of Primatology, 2026 Acoustic communication is important for social cohesion and territory defense in forest primates, including the endangered lion tamarins (genus Leontopithecus ). Although vocalizations of individual species have been studied, there is still no comparative analysis examining whether acoustic parameters can reliably distinguish among all four species. We hypothesized that species‐specific differences in acoustic features allow discrimination among lion tamarin species, and we predicted that both spectral and temporal parameters would reveal interspecific variation. To test this, we analyzed seven shared vocalizations (long calls, whines, trills, rasps, clucks, tsicks, and peeps) from the black‐faced lion tamarin ( Leontopithecus caissara ), golden lion tamarin ( Leontopithecus rosalia ), golden‐headed lion tamarin ( Leontopithecus chrysomelas ), and black lion tamarin ( Leontopithecus chrysopygus ). Acoustic data were obtained from online sound libraries and analyzed using Raven Pro software. Spectral and temporal parameters, including frequency at 5% and 95%, peak frequency, center frequency, and bandwidth 90% were measured, followed by principal component analysis (PCA) and nonparametric statistical tests to identify species‐specific differences. Our results revealed significant interspecific differences across multiple vocalizations, with spectral parameters being the most relevant for distinguishing species, whereas temporal parameters contributed less. L. caissara emerged as the most acoustically distinct species, while L. rosalia and L. chrysopygus exhibited the greatest vocal similarity. In conclusion, this study provides the first comparative analysis of seven vocalization types across all four lion tamarin species, establishing an acoustic baseline, confirming the importance of spectral parameters for species differentiation, and demonstrating the potential of vocalizations for conservation applications.
Lower Habitat Quality Increases Physiological Stress in an Endangered Neotropical Primate Olivier Kaisin, Rodrigo Gonçalves Amaral, Felipe Bufalo, Gabriel Pavan Sabino, Rupert Palme, Pascal Poncin, Gabriela Cabral Rezende, Fany Brotcorne, Laurence Culot Animal Conservation, 2025 Understanding how habitat quality affects wildlife is one of the fundamental questions of conservation biology and ecology. Across the tropics, habitat loss and degradation threaten arboreal species, such as primates. To establish well‐founded, species‐specific conservation management plans, it is crucial to have an adequate understanding of a species' diet, behaviour, habitat, ecology and physiology. Measuring physiological stress in these species offers exclusive insight into how they cope and adapt within their environment. Here, we evaluated the influence of habitat quality on cortisol levels in black lion tamarins ( Leontopithecus chrysopygus ), an endangered frugivorous–faunivorous primate endemic to the state of São Paulo, Brazil. We compared hair cortisol concentrations among six different black lion tamarin populations inhabiting forest fragments of varying quality. We adopted a patch‐landscape approach and measured forest cover to estimate habitat availability for each population. To estimate forest quality in each study, we calculated total tree basal area, a proxy for forest structure and maturity that is positively correlated to fruit availability. Our model revealed that cortisol levels increased as the amount of available habitat and tree basal area decreased. Lower forest cover may alter resource acquisition and disrupt ranging patterns of black lion tamarins, as well as increase the degree of anthropogenic disturbances. Furthermore, forests with smaller trees might impair their movement and decrease fruit and sleeping site availability. Given that small, unprotected fragments and riparian forests represent important habitats in its geographic range, protecting such areas, while increasing inter‐fragment connectivity and limiting human encroachment, is crucial for the conservation of this species.
Genetic monitoring in ex situ populations of the endangered primate Leontopithecus chrysopygus and integrative analyses with the wild founder population Nathalia Bulhões Javarotti, Paola Andrea Ayala-Burbano, Alcides Pissinati, Mara Cristina Marques, Dominic Wormell, Gabriela Cabral Rezende, Laurence Culot, Pedro M. Galetti Jr, Patrícia Domingues de Freitas Plos One, 2025 Captive breeding programs have been used as a relevant strategy to maintain self-sustainable and demographically stable populations with the goal of safeguarding threatened species from their imminent risk of EXTINCTION. Thus, monitoring genetic diversity becomes essential to avoid the loss of genetic diversity and inbreeding depression throughout ex situ generations. Furthermore, such programs must carry out adequate metapopulation management to retain genetic diversity from the wild, minimizing eventual harmful effects associated with adaptation in captivity and sub-structuring. In this study, we analyzed ex situ populations of the endangered black lion tamarin (BLT), Leontopithecus chrysopygus, a primate endemic to the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. We monitored genetic diversity and structure in the three main ex situ groups for conservation purposes, before (2014) and after (2020) the transfer of five captive animals from Brazilian to European institutions. We also analyzed data from the whole studbook of the species to access life-history information about the ex situ populations. In addition, we performed an integrative ex situ/in situ analysis by including extant wild individuals from the same area of the founder population. Finally, we evaluated population viability based on genetic diversity trends predicted for the next 100 years. Our findings showed that the captive breeding program of BLT has been efficient in preventing the loss of heterozygosity despite significant reductions in allelic richness. This reduction is likely due to the loss of private and/or rare alleles resulting from the death of some individuals. The extant ex situ metapopulation and the wild population evidenced significant genetic differentiation and overall low levels of genetic diversity. The predictive analysis indicated that the loss of genetic diversity will be critical for the captive groups. However, the wild population demonstrated a greater capacity to retain genetic diversity over the next 100 years. These findings provide relevant information on the BLT’s captive breeding program and its founder-related wild population, as well as insights for further integrated ex situ/in situ management actions.
Stable Isotopes Analysis of Black Lion Tamarins Reveals Increasing Arthropod Consumption When Fruit Productivity Decreases in Forest Fragments Amazone Raskin, Olivier Kaisin, Loïc N. Michel, Benjamin Lejeune, Gilles Lepoint, Rodrigo Gonçalves Amaral, Felipe Bufalo, Gabriel Pavan Sabino, Márcio Silva Araújo, Gabriela Cabral Rezende, Fany Brotcorne, Laurence Culot American Journal of Primatology, 2025 Given the cryptic and elusive nature of prey consumption, quantifying its contribution to the diet of free‐ranging primates using behavioral methods is challenging. In this context, the use of carbon and nitrogen‐stable isotopes represents a promising alternative approach. Here, we used stable isotope analysis to estimate the proportion of arthropods and fruits in the diet of black lion tamarins (Leontopithecus chrysopygus), an endangered primate endemic to the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. To do so, we ran stable isotope mixing models using isotopic data from hair samples of black lion tamarins living in six forest fragments showing different levels of habitat quality. Furthermore, we ran linear mixed models to assess the influence of habitat quality—fruit productivity (estimated by tree total basal area) and arthropod biomass – and individual characteristics (sex and body mass) on tamarins' δ15N values (a proxy for trophic position). Our results revealed that arthropods contributed more to black lion tamarins' diet than reported in previous behavioral studies, suggesting that behavioral observations may considerably underestimate the importance of arthropodivory in the diet of arboreal primates. The degree of arthropodivory and frugivory was similar within groups, in line with the strong group cohesion and synchronization of feeding behaviors of this species and supporting the role of site‐specific habitat characteristics on dietary choice. Arthropod consumption was higher in areas with lower fruit productivity and did not increase when arthropod biomass increased, suggesting that fruits represent a limiting but preferred resource for this species. These results demonstrate the dietary plasticity of black lion tamarins in areas of lower forest quality, where they manage to compensate low fruit productivity by shifting to a diet richer in arthropods. Considering that this species occurs within a highly fragmented landscape, preserving and protecting small forest patches remains crucial for the conservation of this species.
Taxonomic and natural history notes on Oecomys cleberi (Rodentia: Cricetidae) and first records in the Atlantic Forest, Brazil Marcus Vinicius Brandão, Guilherme Siniciato Terra Garbino, Gabriela Cabral Rezende, Simone Fraga Tenório, Sarah Fontes Reis Studies on Neotropical Fauna and Environment, 2024 The arboreal rodent Oecomys cleberi was previously considered endemic to the Cerrado domain in central-western Brazil. We report on a range extension of O. cleberi to the Atlantic Forest domain of São Paulo, and add new records to Mato Grosso do Sul and Minas Gerais states, totaling 10 new records. Based on a large sample of O. cleberi, we did not find evidence for sexual dimorphism. Our results revealed that specimens of O. cleberi from Cerrado and Atlantic Forest are larger than O. bicolor from the Amazon. Moreover, the larger buccinator–masticatory/foramen ovale confluence in O. cleberi allowed further distinction to O. bicolor. We also provide further details of morphological variation within O. cleberi. Reproductive males and females of O. cleberi were recorded in the rainy season, between December and January, and one male was infested by the mite Gigantolaelaps canestrinii. Our new records show that this arboreal rodent is also present in seasonal forests within the domain of the Atlantic Forest. We suggest that this species, typical of the Cerrado, occurs only marginally in the Atlantic Forest of São Paulo.
Securing black lion tamarin populations: improving habitat-based inputs and risks for population viability analysis to inform management decisions Francy Forero-Sánchez, Gabriela Cabral Rezende, Cláudio Valladares-Pádua, Fabio Stucchi Vannucchi, Leandro Jerusalinsky, Luciana Pacca, Kathy Traylor-Holzer Frontiers in Conservation Science, 2024 Wild populations across the globe face an escalating risk of decline and potential extinction due to a variety of threats. Key among these are habitat loss and degradation, which results in smaller, isolated populations that are vulnerable to stochastic effects. The Endangered black lion tamarin (Leontopithecus chrysopygus) survives in 17 fragments of the Atlantic Forest within the Paranapanema River basin, in southeast Brazil, with an estimated 2,255 individuals. Life history and threat data from the 2005 Population Viability Analysis (PVA) for this species were updated and augmented, including new estimates of environmental resistance factors present in, or projected for, their habitat. Notably, improved estimates of carrying capacity for this species were developed using a plant-based energetic model. Climate change and fire risk data were incorporated to project future carrying capacity, and habitat connectivity supported estimates of black lion tamarin dispersal across this fragmented landscape. The resulting population viability projections using Vortex simulation software identify core subpopulations with low extinction risk and high gene diversity, as well as smaller subpopulations with low long-term viability, highlighting the need for targeted conservation strategies across the fragmented metapopulation.
New records of Amblyomma ticks parasitizing neotropical primates in Brazil Felipe Rieth de Lima, Thiago Fernandes Martins, Paulo Henrique Gomes de Castro, Júlio César de Souza Júnior, Daniel Angelo Felippi, Gabriela Cabral Rezende, Vinícius José Alves Pereira, Márcio Port-Carvalho, Bianka Heimeshoff Schulz, Bruno Simões Sérgio Petri, Haroldo Ryoiti Furuya, Lilian Rose Marques de Sá, Leonora Antunes dos Santos, Anderson Barbosa de Moura, Adriano Pinter, Marcelo Bahia Labruna, Andreas Lazaros Chryssafidis Ticks and Tick Borne Diseases, 2023 Amblyomma is an important tick genus for animal and human health, with some species being the vectors of zoonotic pathogens, such as Rickettsia rickettsii, in the Neotropical region. Knowing their hosts may help to understand the distribution of these agents and decrease the occurrence of clinical cases. Primates are intelligent and adaptable animals that can get close to humans in the search for food. So, they may be an important epidemiological link for the spread of these ticks. Beyond that, primates also suffer from these infections, serving as sentinels for different diseases. Thus, the present study aims to report the parasitism by Amblyomma spp. on six species of Neotropical primates from different locations in Brazil. The 337 collected ticks were morphologically identified using stereomicroscopes and taxonomic keys, and six distinct species of ticks were identified. We report here the first record of nymphs of the tick species Amblyomma cajennense sensu stricto on Alouatta belzebul, a male of Amblyomma fuscum on Alouatta guariba clamitans, nymphs of Amblyomma sculptum on Leontopithecus chrysopygus and Callithrix aurita, as well as nymphs of Amblyomma geayi on Saimiri collinsi. Of the 337 tick specimens collected, 256 (75,96%) were nymphs. The importance of primates in the life cycle of these species remains to be elucidated.
Performance of autonomous recorders to detect a cryptic and endangered primate species, the black lion-tamarin (Leontopithecus chrysopygus) André H. Zambolli, Maria Carolina R. Manzano, Laura Kyoko Honda, Gabriela C. Rezende, Laurence Culot American Journal of Primatology, 2023 Information about species distribution is important for conservation but the monitoring of populations can demand a high sampling effort with traditional methods (e.g., line transects, sound playback) that are poorly efficient for cryptic primates, such as the black lion tamarin (Leontopithecus chrysopygus). Here we investigated the effectiveness of passive acoustic monitoring (PAM) as an alternative method to identify the presence of vocalizing lion tamarins in the wild. We aimed to: (1) determine the maximum distance at which autonomous recorders (Song Meter 3) and Raven Pro acoustic software can respectively detect and identify lion tamarin long calls emitted by two captive subjects (ex situ study); and (2) determine the sampling effort required to confirm the presence of the species in the wild (in situ study). In captive settings, we recorded lion tamarin long calls with one to two autonomous recorders operating at increasing distances from the animals' enclosure (8−202 m). In a 515 ha forest fragment, we deployed 12 recorders in a grid, 300 m apart from each other, within the estimated 100 ha home range of one group, and let them record for 10 consecutive days, totaling 985 h. In the ex situ study, hand‐browsing of spectrograms yielded 298 long calls emitted from 8 to 194 m, and Raven's Template Detector identified 54.6% of them, also emitted from 8 to 194 m. In the in situ study, we manually counted 1115 long calls, and the Raven's Template Detector identified 44.75% of them. Furthermore, the presence of lion tamarins was confirmed within 1 day using four randomly sorted recorders, whereas 5 days on average were necessary with only one device. While specific protocols still need to be developed to determine primate population size using this technology, we concluded that PAM is a promising tool when considering long term costs and benefits.
High richness of non-volant mammals in a seasonal forest fragment in southeastern Brazil Guilherme Siniciato Terra Garbino, Gabriela Cabral Rezende, Marcus Vinicius Brandão de Oliveira, Amandine Lambot, Flávia Souza Rocha, Laurence Culot Papeis Avulsos De Zoologia, 2022 The seasonal forest formations of the Atlantic Forest are a threatened and poorly known habitat. We present here a list of the non-volant mammals occurring in a 515‑ha forest fragment known as Santa Maria and located in the Brazilian state of São Paulo. Our surveys are based on live trap captures, camera traps, and active searches for footprints, as well as secondary data. We list 29 species of non-volant mammals in the fragment, recorded between 1996 and 2021. One species found in the fragment, Leontopithecus chrysopygus, is globally endangered. Two species are classified as "vulnerable" in the global red list: Myrmecophaga tridactyla, and Tapirus terresris. One species, Panthera onca, is classified as "critically endangered" in São Paulo state. The red howler, Alouatta guariba, was not recorded after 1999 and has probably been extirpated in the fragment. We show that the number of non-volant mammal species in Santa Maria fragment is high, in relation to its size. The fragment is also in a strategic position, between the Morro do Diabo state park and the Black Lion Tamarin Ecological station, the two largest protected areas in the region. Considering its high mammal richness and its possible role as stepping stone for the local fauna, we recommend that the fragment become a protected area.
ATLANTIC-PRIMATES: a dataset of communities and occurrences of primates in the Atlantic Forests of South America Laurence Culot, Lucas Augusto Pereira, Ilaria Agostini, Marco Antônio Barreto de Almeida, Rafael Souza Cruz Alves, Izar Aximoff, Alex Bager, María Celia Baldovino, Thiago Ribas Bella, Júlio César Bicca‐Marques, Caryne Braga, Carlos Rodrigo Brocardo, Ana Kellen Nogueira Campelo, Gustavo R. Canale, Jader da Cruz Cardoso, Eduardo Carrano, Diogo Cavenague Casanova, Camila Righetto Cassano, Erika Castro, Jorge José Cherem, Adriano Garcia Chiarello, Braz Antonio Pereira Cosenza, Rodrigo Costa‐Araújo, Nilmara Cristina da Silva, Mario S. Di Bitetti, Aluane Silva Ferreira, Priscila Coutinho Ribas Ferreira, Marcos de S. Fialho, Lisieux Franco Fuzessy, Guilherme Siniciato Terra Garbino, Francini de Oliveira Garcia, Cassiano A. F. R. Gatto, Carla Cristina Gestich, Pablo Rodrigues Gonçalves, Nila Rássia Costa Gontijo, Maurício Eduardo Graipel, Carlos Eduardo Guidorizzi, Robson Odeli Espíndola Hack, Gabriela Pacheco Hass, Renato Richard Hilário, André Hirsch, Ingrid Holzmann, Daniel Henrique Homem, Hilton Entringer Júnior, Gilberto Sabino‐Santos Júnior, Maria Cecília Martins Kierulff, Christoph Knogge, Fernando Lima, Elson Fernandes de Lima, Cristiana Saddy Martins, Adriana Almeida de Lima, Alexandre Martins, Waldney Pereira Martins, Fabiano R. de Melo, Ricardo Melzew, João Marcelo Deliberador Miranda, Flávia Miranda, Andréia Magro Moraes, Tainah Cruz Moreira, Maria Santina de Castro Morini, Mariana B. Nagy‐Reis, Luciana Oklander, Leonardo de Carvalho Oliveira, Adriano Pereira Paglia, Anderson Pagoto, Marcelo Passamani, Fernando de Camargo Passos, Carlos A. Peres, Michell Soares de Campos Perine, Míriam Plaza Pinto, Antonio Rossano Mendes Pontes, Marcio Port‐Carvalho, Bárbara Heliodora Soares do Prado, André Luis Regolin, Gabriela Cabral Rezende, Alessandro Rocha, Joedison dos S. Rocha, Raisa Reis de Paula Rodarte, Lilian Patrícia Sales, Edmilson dos Santos, Paloma Marques Santos, Christine Steiner São Bernardo, Ricardo Sartorello, Leonardo La Serra, Eleonore Setz, Anne Sophie de Almeida e Silva, Leonardo Henrique da Silva, Pedro Bencke Ermel da Silva, Maurício Silveira, Rebecca L. Smith, Sara Machado de Souza, Ana Carolina Srbek‐Araujo, Leonardo Carreira Trevelin, Claudio Valladares‐Padua, Luciana Zago, Eduardo Marques, Stephen Francis Ferrari, Raone Beltrão‐Mendes, Denison José Henz, Francys E. da Veiga da Costa, Igor Kintopp Ribeiro, Lucas Lacerda Toth Quintilham, Marcos Dums, Pryscilla Moura Lombardi, Renata Twardowsky Ramalho Bonikowski, Stéfani Gabrieli Age, João Pedro Souza‐Alves, Renata Chagas, Rogério Grassetto Teixeira da Cunha, Monica Mafra Valença‐Montenegro, Gabriela Ludwig, Leandro Jerusalinsky, Gerson Buss, Renata Bocorny de Azevedo, Roberio Freire Filho, Felipe Bufalo, Louis Milhe, Mayara Mulato dos Santos, Raíssa Sepulvida, Daniel da Silva Ferraz, Michel Barros Faria, Milton Cezar Ribeiro, Mauro Galetti Ecology, 2019
ATLANTIC MAMMAL TRAITS: a data set of morphological traits of mammals in the Atlantic Forest of South America Fernando Gonçalves, Ricardo S. Bovendorp, Gabrielle Beca, Carolina Bello, Raul Costa‐Pereira, Renata L. Muylaert, Raisa R. Rodarte, Nacho Villar, Rafael Souza, Maurício E. Graipel, Jorge J. Cherem, Deborah Faria, Julio Baumgarten, Martín R. Alvarez, Emerson M. Vieira, Nilton Cáceres, Renata Pardini, Yuri L. R. Leite, Leonora P. Costa, Marco A. R. Mello, Erich Fischer, Fernando C. Passos, Luiz H. Varzinczak, Jayme A. Prevedello, Ariovaldo P. Cruz‐Neto, Fernando Carvalho, Alexandre R. Percequillo, Agustin Paviolo, Alessandra Nava, José M. B. Duarte, Noé U. de la Sancha, Enrico Bernard, Ronaldo G. Morato, Juliana F. Ribeiro, Rafael G. Becker, Gabriela Paise, Paulo S. Tomasi, Felipe Vélez‐Garcia, Geruza L. Melo, Jonas Sponchiado, Felipe Cerezer, Marília A. S. Barros, Albérico Q. S. de Souza, Cinthya C. dos Santos, Gastón A. F. Giné, Patricia Kerches‐Rogeri, Marcelo M. Weber, Guilherme Ambar, Lucía V. Cabrera‐Martinez, Alan Eriksson, Maurício Silveira, Carolina F. Santos, Lucas Alves, Eder Barbier, Gabriela C. Rezende, Guilherme S. T. Garbino, Élson O. Rios, Adna Silva, Alexandre Túlio A. Nascimento, Rodrigo S. de Carvalho, Anderson Feijó, Juan Arrabal, Ilaria Agostini, Daniela Lamattina, Sebastian Costa, Ezequiel Vanderhoeven, Fabiano R. de Melo, Plautino de Oliveira Laroque, Leandro Jerusalinsky, Mônica M. Valença‐Montenegro, Amely B. Martins, Gabriela Ludwig, Renata B. de Azevedo, Agustin Anzóategui, Marina X. da Silva, Marcela Figuerêdo Duarte Moraes, Alexandre Vogliotti, Andressa Gatti, Thomas Püttker, Camila S. Barros, Thais K. Martins, Alexine Keuroghlian, Donald P. Eaton, Carolina L. Neves, Marcelo S. Nardi, Caryne Braga, Pablo R. Gonçalves, Ana Carolina Srbek‐Araujo, Poliana Mendes, João A. de Oliveira, Fábio A. M. Soares, Patrício A. Rocha, Peter Crawshaw, Milton C. Ribeiro, Mauro Galetti Ecology, 2018
Arboreal Camera Trap-based Insights into the Activity, Resource Use, and Demography of Black Lion Tamarins (Leontopithecus chrysopygus) and Sympatric Mammals in Atlantic Forest … DA Felippi, MCR Manzano, PN Franco, VJA Pereira, JVM Teixeira, ... International Journal of Primatology, 1-26 , 2026 2026
Vocalizations Reveal Species Differences in Endangered Lion Tamarins (Primates, Callitrichidae) MCR Manzano, RJ Sawaya, GC Rezende, ML Silva American Journal of Primatology 88 (1), e70115 , 2026 2026
Lower Habitat Quality Increases Physiological Stress in an Endangered Neotropical Primate O Kaisin, RG Amaral, F Bufalo, GP Sabino, R Palme, P Poncin, ... Animal Conservation 28 (5), 619-630 , 2025 2025 Citations: 1
Harboring Starships : The Accumulation of Large Horizontal Gene Transfers in Domesticated and Pathogenic Fungi S O’donnell, G Rezende, JP Vernadet, A Snirc, J Ropars Genome Biology and Evolution 17 (7), evaf125 , 2025 2025 Citations: 14
Genetic monitoring in ex situ populations of the endangered primate Leontopithecus chrysopygus and integrative analyses with the wild founder population NB Javarotti, PA Ayala-Burbano, A Pissinati, MC Marques, D Wormell, ... PloS one 20 (5), e0322817 , 2025 2025 Citations: 2
Securing black lion tamarin populations: improving habitat-based inputs and risks for population viability analysis to inform management decisions F Forero-Sánchez, GC Rezende, C Valladares-Pádua, FS Vannucchi, ... Frontiers in Conservation Science 5, 1423321 , 2025 2025 Citations: 5
Genetic monitoring in ex situ populations of the endangered primate Leontopithecus chrysopygus and integrative analyses with the wild founder population N Bulhões Javarotti, PA Ayala-Burbano, A Pissinati, MC Marques, ... 2025
Ecologia e conservação dos primatas da região fragmentada do Pontal do Paranapanema MCR Manzano Universidade de São Paulo , 2025 2025
Stable isotopes analysis of Black lion tamarins reveals increasing arthropod consumption when fruit productivity decreases in forest fragments A Raskin, O Kaisin, LN Michel, B Lejeune, G Lepoint, RG Amaral, F Bufalo, ... American Journal of Primatology 87 (1), e23698 , 2025 2025 Citations: 5
Taxonomic and natural history notes on Oecomys cleberi (Rodentia: Cricetidae) and first records in the Atlantic Forest, Brazil MV Brandão, GST Garbino, GC Rezende, SF Tenório, SF Reis Studies on Neotropical Fauna and Environment 59 (1), 59-73 , 2024 2024 Citations: 4
Thermal sensors as a potential tool for studying Endangered lion tamarins GC Rezende, DÂ Felippi, FR de Melo, L Jerusalinsky Oryx 57 (6), 694-694 , 2023 2023 Citations: 3
Validating Dynamic Body Acceleration metrics as a measure of energy expenditure in a Neotropical primate GC Rezende, AP Cruz-Neto, L Börger, J Redcliffe, C Hambly, ... bioRxiv, 2023.06. 29.547103 , 2023 2023 Citations: 1
Calling for the future of conservation: a protocol for passive acoustic monitoring of small arboreal primates MCR Manzano, DA Felippi, LSM Sugai, R Sawaya, ML da Silva, ... Brazilian Journal of Mammalogy, e922023122-e922023122 , 2023 2023 Citations: 3
New records of Amblyomma ticks parasitizing neotropical primates in Brazil FR Lima, TF Martins, PHG Castro, JC Souza Junior, DA Felippi, ... Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases 14 (4), 1-8 , 2023 2023 Citations: 8
Performance of autonomous recorders to detect a cryptic and endangered primate species, the black lion‐tamarin ( Leontopithecus chrysopygus ) AH Zambolli, MCR Manzano, LK Honda, GC Rezende, L Culot American Journal of Primatology 85 (1), e23454 , 2023 2023 Citations: 13
Uso do habitat, padrões de movimento e gasto energético de micos-leões-pretos (Leontopithecus chrysopygus) GC Rezende Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp) , 2022 2022 Citations: 2
High richness of non-volant mammals in a seasonal forest fragment in southeastern Brazil GST Garbino, GC Rezende, MVB Oliveira, A Lambot, FS Rocha, L Culot Papéis Avulsos de Zoologia 62, e202262017 , 2022 2022 Citations: 1
Seasonal variation in frog predation by black lion tamarins ( Leontopithecus chrysopygus , Primates) GST Garbino, GC Rezende, DC Antônio, F Bufalo, RG Amaral, ... Journal of Natural History 56 (5-8), 449-461 , 2022 2022 Citations: 4
Impact of habitat quality on physiological stress in a neotropical primate O Kaisin, R Amaral, F Bufalo, G Sabino, R Palme, P Poncin, G Rezende, ... 2022
Effect of the habitat quality on the sleeping site selection by the black lion tamarin (Leontopithecus chrysopygus) D Giancola, R Amaral, O Kaisin, G Sabino, F Bufalo, G Rezende, L Culot Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation , 2021 2021
MOST CITED SCHOLAR PUBLICATIONS
ATLANTIC‐PRIMATES: A dataset of communities and occurrences of primates in the Atlantic Forests of South America L Culot, LA Pereira, I Agostini, MAB de Almeida, RSC Alves, I Aximoff, ... Ecology 100 (1), e02525 , 2019 2019 Citations: 117
ATLANTIC MAMMAL TRAITS: a data set of morphological traits of mammals in the Atlantic Forest of South America F Gonçalves, RS Bovendorp, G Beca, C Bello, R Costa‐Pereira, ... Ecology 99 (2), 498-498 , 2018 2018 Citations: 80
Reconsidering mammal extinctions in the Pernambuco endemism center of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest GST Garbino, GC Rezende, H Fernandes–Ferreira, A Feijó Animal Biodiversity and Conservation 41 (1), 175-184 , 2018 2018 Citations: 39
Mico-leão-preto: a História de Sucesso na Conservação de uma Espécie Ameaçada GC Rezende Matrix Editora , 2014 2014 Citations: 38
Integrating climate and landscape models to prioritize areas and conservation strategies for an endangered arboreal primate G Cabral Rezende, T Sobral‐Souza, L Culot American Journal of Primatology 82 (12), e23202 , 2020 2020 Citations: 34
Leontopithecus chrysopygus G Rezende, C Knogge, F Passos, G Ludwig, LC Oliveira, L Jerusalinsky, ... The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 8235 , 2020 2020 Citations: 32
Pelage variation and distribution of the black lion tamarin, Leontopithecus chrysopygus GST Garbino, GC Rezende, C Valladares-Padua Folia Primatologica 87 (4), 244-261 , 2016 2016 Citations: 27
Ecological aspects of helminth fauna of Magellanic penguins, Spheniscus magellanicus (aves: Spheniscidae), from the Northern Coast of the State of São Paulo, Brazil GC Rezende, P Baldassin, H Gallo, RJ Silva Brazilian Journal of Biology 73, 61-66 , 2013 2013 Citations: 17
Harboring Starships : The Accumulation of Large Horizontal Gene Transfers in Domesticated and Pathogenic Fungi S O’donnell, G Rezende, JP Vernadet, A Snirc, J Ropars Genome Biology and Evolution 17 (7), evaf125 , 2025 2025 Citations: 14
Performance of autonomous recorders to detect a cryptic and endangered primate species, the black lion‐tamarin ( Leontopithecus chrysopygus ) AH Zambolli, MCR Manzano, LK Honda, GC Rezende, L Culot American Journal of Primatology 85 (1), e23454 , 2023 2023 Citations: 13
New records of Amblyomma ticks parasitizing neotropical primates in Brazil FR Lima, TF Martins, PHG Castro, JC Souza Junior, DA Felippi, ... Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases 14 (4), 1-8 , 2023 2023 Citations: 8
Predation of treefrogs (Anura: Hylidae) with toxic skin secretions by the black lion tamarin ( Leontopithecus chrysopygus , Callitrichinae) GST Garbino, LH da Silva, RG Amaral, GC Rezende, VJA Pereira, L Culot Primates 61 (4), 567-572 , 2020 2020 Citations: 7
Securing black lion tamarin populations: improving habitat-based inputs and risks for population viability analysis to inform management decisions F Forero-Sánchez, GC Rezende, C Valladares-Pádua, FS Vannucchi, ... Frontiers in Conservation Science 5, 1423321 , 2025 2025 Citations: 5
Stable isotopes analysis of Black lion tamarins reveals increasing arthropod consumption when fruit productivity decreases in forest fragments A Raskin, O Kaisin, LN Michel, B Lejeune, G Lepoint, RG Amaral, F Bufalo, ... American Journal of Primatology 87 (1), e23698 , 2025 2025 Citations: 5
Taxonomic and natural history notes on Oecomys cleberi (Rodentia: Cricetidae) and first records in the Atlantic Forest, Brazil MV Brandão, GST Garbino, GC Rezende, SF Tenório, SF Reis Studies on Neotropical Fauna and Environment 59 (1), 59-73 , 2024 2024 Citations: 4
Seasonal variation in frog predation by black lion tamarins ( Leontopithecus chrysopygus , Primates) GST Garbino, GC Rezende, DC Antônio, F Bufalo, RG Amaral, ... Journal of Natural History 56 (5-8), 449-461 , 2022 2022 Citations: 4
Uso de tiendas de hojas por Artibeus y Uroderma (Chiroptera, Phyllostomidae) en el norte de Colombia GST Garbino, GC Rezende, V da Cunha Tavares Mastozoología neotropical 25 (2), 467-472 , 2018 2018 Citations: 4
Thermal sensors as a potential tool for studying Endangered lion tamarins GC Rezende, DÂ Felippi, FR de Melo, L Jerusalinsky Oryx 57 (6), 694-694 , 2023 2023 Citations: 3
Calling for the future of conservation: a protocol for passive acoustic monitoring of small arboreal primates MCR Manzano, DA Felippi, LSM Sugai, R Sawaya, ML da Silva, ... Brazilian Journal of Mammalogy, e922023122-e922023122 , 2023 2023 Citations: 3
Genetic monitoring in ex situ populations of the endangered primate Leontopithecus chrysopygus and integrative analyses with the wild founder population NB Javarotti, PA Ayala-Burbano, A Pissinati, MC Marques, D Wormell, ... PloS one 20 (5), e0322817 , 2025 2025 Citations: 2