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Figure 1. The richness of species and IUCN species conservation and population status of primates in Brazil, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Madagascar and Indonesia.In the graph, the numbers below the names of the countries refer to the number of species used to calculate the percentages for species threatened and declining populations. Because population assessments are not available for all species, we focused on those for which recent information is available (Table S2). Source of data: IUCN Red List 2017-3 (http://www.iucnredlist.org; accessed 5 February 2018).
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Figure 2. (A) Trends in tree cover loss (>30% canopy cover) in Brazil, DRC, Indonesia, and Madagascar for the period 2001–2016. (B) Cumulative tree cover (in Intact Forest Landscapes IFL) loss in each country for the same period. Source of data Global Forest Watch (http://www.globalforestwatch.org; accessed 5 February 2018). IFL: an unbroken expanse of natural ecosystems of at least 500 km2, forested, and without signs of significant human activity (Potapov et al., 2008). Forest loss ranged in Brazil from 2.74 M ha in 2001 to 5.37 M ha in 2016; in Indonesia from 745.43 K ha to 2.42 M ha; in DRC from 455.43 K ha to 1.38 M ha, and in Madagascar from 86.95 K ha to 383.55 K ha.
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Figure 3. The projected expansion of agriculture and pastures in (A) Brazil, (B) the Democratic Republic of the Congo, (C) Madagascar, and (D) Indonesia for 2050 and 2100, under a worst-case scenario of land use from native vegetation to agricultural fields and pasture.See Text S1 for a description of the methods used. Data on species geographic distribution are derived from IUCN (2017) and the scenarios of agricultural expansion from the Integrated Model to Assess the Global Environment (IMAGE, version 2.2) (IMAGE Team, 2001) (see Dobrovolski et al., 2013). Notice the spatial shift of conservation conflicts, including the abandonment of some agricultural areas by 2100 in DRC and Madagascar. This condition, however, may not imply an immediate benefit for primate species, as local populations would have been extirpated, areas would have been dramatically altered prior to abandonment, and would likely require decades to regenerate to closed-canopy, old secondary forest. See Fig. S6 for a model based on an optimistic scenario and on a business-as-usual scenario.
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Figure 4. Photos of selected land cover changes in primate range countries, illegal primate trade, and the primate bushmeat trade.Photo credits include the following: (A) Soybean plantation and recent deforestation of forest patches in the Cerrado Biome, Jataí, Goiás State, Brazil (Photo credit: Fabiano R. de Melo), (B) Pastures for cattle ranching surrounding Atlantic Forest patches inside the Cerrado Biome, Rio Verde, Goiás State, Brazil. (Photo credit: Izaltino Guimarães Jr), (C) Indonesia, illegal logging Central Kalimantan (Photo credit: R. Butler), (D) Indonesia, deforestation (Photo credit: R. Butler), (E) Indonesia, Sunda slow loris (Nycticebus coucang), sold in Jakarta (Photo credit: A. Walmsley and Little Fireface Project), (F) DRC, smoked bonobo (Pan paniscus) meat at a rural meat market (Photo credit: J. Head).
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Figure 5. Total urban and rural population growth and projections for (A) Brazil, (B) DRC, (C) Madagascar, and (D) Indonesia.Steep growth is forecasted for the next few decades with urban populations significantly increasing, while rural populations are expected to decline. Source: http://www.fao.org/faostat/en/#data (accessed 15 August 2017).
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Figure 7. The 1990–2015 Human Development Index (HDI) in Brazil, Indonesia, Madagascar, and DRC (Lowest human development = 0; highest = 1.0). Also shown is the average HDI for the world and for the top 25 most developed nations.The number in parentheses after each country indicates their HDI world rank. The number in parenthesis after the name of each country indicates its HDI ranking compared to 188 countries. No data are available for Madagascar for 1990. Source: United Nations Development Program (http://hdr.undp.org/en/composite/trend (accessed 11 January 2018).
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Figure 8. The graph, produced using the World Bank database, shows the percentile rank of four key World Bank governance indicators for Brazil, DRC, Madagascar, and Indonesia. Percentile rank: the percentage of countries that rate below the selected country.Higher values indicate better governance ratings. Shown for comparison is the percentile rank for high-income OECD countries (n = 35; Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development). Percentile ranks have been adjusted to account for changes over time in the set of countries covered by the governance indicators. The statistically likely range of the governance indicator is shown as a thin black line. For instance, a bar of length 75% with the thin black lines extending from 60% to 85% has the following interpretation: an estimated 75% of the countries rate worse and an estimated 25% of the countries rate better than the country of choice. Source: http://info.worldbank.org/governance/wgi/index.aspx#reports (accessed 17 November 2017).
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Figure 9. Distribution of protected areas and primate distributions in (A) Brazil, (B) DRC, (C) Madagascar, and (D) Indonesia.In this model, primate species distributions are based on data from the IUCN Red List (accessed May 2017), protected areas distributions from UNEP-WCMC (2017) and forest cover from Hansen et al. (2013). Images are scaled to ca. 300 m of spatial resolution. We included 2,190 protected areas in the Brazil dataset, 49 in DRC, 147 in Madagascar and 646 in Indonesia (Text S1).
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Figure 10. Photos of selected primates from each country.Conservation status and photo credits include the following: (A) DRC, Grauer’s gorilla (Gorilla beringei graueri), Critically Endangered, (Photo credit: J. Martin), (B) Madagascar, Sahafary sportive lemur (Lepilemur septentrionalis) Critically Endangered (Photo credit: R. A. Mittermeier), (C) Indonesia, Javan slow loris (Nycticebus javanicus), Critically Endangered (Photo Credit: Andrew Walmsley/Little Fireface Project), (D) Brazil, northern muriqui (Brachyteles hypoxanthus), Critically Endangered (Photo credit: Raphaella Coutinho), (E) Brazil, pygmy marmoset (Cebuella pygmaea), Vulnerable, (Photo credit: Pablo Yépez), (F) Sumatran orangutan (Pongo abelii), Critically Endangered (Photo Credit: Perry van Duijnhoven).
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Figure 11. Diagram summarizing key environmental challenges common to Brazil, DRC, Madagascar, and Indonesia that affect conservation of their primate fauna.The relative importance of some pressures and population aspects vary from country to country. For example, hunting in DRC is a large-scale pressure because the local human population has little or no access to domestic meat. Because of their large size and low population density relative to the size of the country, Brazil and DRC are in a better position to anticipate the direction of these pressures and prevent primate declines and extirpation. However, in contrast to Brazil, DRC is particularly poor, its human population is rapidly growing, and human development is very low, whereas civil unrest is predominant and corruption and weak governance are an ever-present condition. Madagascar differs from these two countries, and from Indonesia in having a very small percentage of its original forest left. A rapidly expanding human population and high levels of poverty and weak governance are predominant. Indonesia is a developing country with a large human population that has embarked on a policy of rapidly replacing its forests with commercial plantations and expanding industrial logging at the expense of biodiversity.
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