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In July of 2009 a team of socio-economic experts from the United States and Peru conducted a social asset inventory of the ancestral territory of the Maijuna indigenous people in northeastern Peru in order to identify patterns of social organization and opportunities for capacity building. Shortly thereafter, in October of 2009, another team of scientists conducted a rapid biological inventory of the area and its vegetation, plants, fishes, amphibians, reptiles, birds, medium-to-large mammals, and bats. Both arms of the project were intended to assess the region's suitability for protection as a regional conservation area. The full report and results are provided in Spanish and English.
Michael P. Gilmore is assistant professor of life sciences and integrative studies at New Century College, George Mason University; Corine Vriesendorp is a conservation ecologist with Environment, Culture, and Conservation at the Field Museum, Chicago; William S. Alverson is a senior conservation ecologist/botanist with ECCo; Álvaro del Campo is the international field programs manager with ECCo; Rudolf von May is a specialist in amphibians and reptiles at Florida International University in Miami; Christina López Wong is the coordinator of the Programa de Conservación, Gestión y Uso Sostenible de la Diversidad Biológica en Loreto, Iquitos, Peru; and Sebastián Ríos Ochoa is president of the Sucusari Maijuna Community.
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