Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-qlrfm Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-12T20:17:46.265Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Primates and conservation priorities in Madagascar

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 April 2009

Jon I. Pollock
Affiliation:
25 Florence Park, Westbury Park, Bristol BS6 7LS, UK.
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Madagascar's conservation problems are many, but the Malagasy Government is working towards solutions, having recently passed into law a strategy that links development with the conservation of natural resources. The protection of the country's remaining forests is a key concern, both for the human population and for the non-human primates. The author is a primatologist and has a research background in behavioural ecology, reproduction and conservation, especially with prosimians. This article was first presented at the joint Primate Society of Great Britain/FFPS meeting on primate conservation in December 1985.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna and Flora International 1986

References

Battistini, R. and Verin, P. 1972. Man and the environment in Madagascar. In Biogeography and Ecology in Madagascar (Eds Battistini, R. and Richard-Vindard, G.. pp. 311338. Monographiae Biologicae 21, Junk, The Hague.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DeLord, J.M. 1965. Monographie de la Côte Est de Madagascar. Bulletin Technique des Eaux et Forêts et de la Conservation des Sols, 2.Google Scholar
Dewar, R. 1984. Extinctions in Madagascar: the cases of the subfossil lemurs. In Quartenary Extinctions (Eds Martin, P. S. and Klein, R. G.), pp. 574593. University of Arizona Press.Google Scholar
Eaux et Forêts. 1980. Report quoted in IUCN-CMC (1985).Google Scholar
FAO. 1978. Yearbook of Forest Products 1966–1976. FAO, Rome.Google Scholar
FAO. 1981. Production Yearbook 1980. FAO, Rome.Google Scholar
Frankel, O.H. and Soulé, M.E. 1981. Conservation and Evolution. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gorse, J. 1985. Fuelwood and domestic energy: the fuelwood ‘crisis’ in tropical west Africa. World Bank Report.Google Scholar
IUCN-CMC. 1985. An Environmental Profile of Madagascar. Conservation Monitoring Centre, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Le Bourdiec, P. 1972. Accelerated erosion and soil degradation. In Biogeography and Ecology in Madagascar (Eds Battistini, R. and Richard-Vindard, G.). pp. 227260. Monographiae Biologicae 21. Junk, The Hague.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lebrun, J. 1960. Sur la richesse de la flore de diverses territoires Africaines. Bulletin des Séances de l'Academie Royal des Sciences Outre-Mer. n.s. 6(2), 669690.Google Scholar
Oxby, C. 1985. Forest farmers: the transformation of land use and society in eastern Madagascar. Unasylva 37(148). 4251.Google Scholar
Paulian, R. 1961. La Zoogeographie de Madagascar et des îles voisines. Faune de Madagascar XIII. IRS. Tananarive.Google Scholar
Perrier de la Bathie, M.H. 1921. La vegetation malgache. Annales de Musée Colonial de Marseille serie 3. vol. 9.Google Scholar
Pollock, J.I. 1975. The Social Behaviour and Ecology of Indri indri. PhD Thesis. University of London.Google Scholar
Pollock, J.I. 1986. Towards a conservation policy in eastern Madagascar Primate Conservation (in press).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ratovoson, C. 1979. Les problèmes du tavy sur la côte est malgache. Madagascar Revue de Geographie. 35, 141163.Google Scholar
Sussman, R. W. 1972. An ecological study of two Madagascan primates: Lemur fulvus rufus (Audebert) and Lemur catta (Linnaeus). PhD Thesis. Duke University. North Carolina.Google Scholar
Thompson, V. 1982. Madagascar. In Africa South of the Sahara. Europa Press.Google Scholar