Report
By: Nigel Pitman(Editor), Adriana Bravo(Editor), Santiago Claramunt(Editor), Corine Vriesendorp(Editor), Diana Alvira Reyes(Editor), Ashwin Ravikumar(Editor), Álvaro del Campo(Editor), Douglas F Stotz(Editor), Tyana Wachter(Editor), Sebastian Heilpern(Editor), Benjamín Rodríguez Grández(Editor), Ana Rosa Sáenz Rodríguez(Editor), Richard Chase Smith(Editor)
522 pages, 24 plates with colour photos and colour illustrations; 14 b/w illustrations, 12 b/w maps, tables
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Language: Bilingual in English and Spanish, with multilingual summaries in English, Spanish, Ocaina, Murui, and Maijuna
In February 2016, a multidisciplinary team of geologists, biologists, social scientists, and local residents explored the rivers, forests, and human communities of a remote area in northern Amazonian Peru, along the Putumayo, Algodón, and Mutun rivers. This report describes the current status of the region's plant, fish, amphibian, reptile, bird, and mammal communities, as well as the current and historical use of its rich natural resources by local indigenous and campesino communities. At the heart of the report is a series of recommendations for protecting the Putumayo region's extraordinary cultural and biological diversity. The main text is in both Spanish and English, with executive summaries in Ocaina, Murui, and Maijuna.
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Biography
Nigel Pitman is a botanist in the Keller Science Action Center at the Field Museum, Chicago.
Report
By: Nigel Pitman(Editor), Adriana Bravo(Editor), Santiago Claramunt(Editor), Corine Vriesendorp(Editor), Diana Alvira Reyes(Editor), Ashwin Ravikumar(Editor), Álvaro del Campo(Editor), Douglas F Stotz(Editor), Tyana Wachter(Editor), Sebastian Heilpern(Editor), Benjamín Rodríguez Grández(Editor), Ana Rosa Sáenz Rodríguez(Editor), Richard Chase Smith(Editor)
522 pages, 24 plates with colour photos and colour illustrations; 14 b/w illustrations, 12 b/w maps, tables