Four species of the avian family Cracidae were studied in the Pacaya‐Samiria National Reserve in north‐eastern Peru. These large‐bodied birds are an important source of protein for local communities on the periphery of the reserve. An estimated 425 kg of Cracidae biomass were harvested over a 1‐year period by three communities. Pipile cumanensis was the most frequently hunted bird, both in terms of individuals hunted and biomass extracted. Mitu tuberosa and Penelope jaquacu also made up a substantial amount of the biomass extracted, but were hunted less frequently. Densities of all species of Cracidae within 5 km of the villages were substantially lower than in the interior of the reserve. Our results suggest that M. tuberosa and P. cumanensis are overharvested and P. jaquacu and Ortalis guttata are harvested within the maximum estimated sustainable levels. In this study hunting grounds were along waterways and adjacent to protected populations, which created a source–sink arrangement. If sink areas are overhunted, the unhunted populations inland of the waterways could be acting as source populations that replenish overhunted areas.
The recording in 1992 of an unknown antbird loudsong initiated a journey of discovery that led to the resolution of the conflict between John Zimmer (1932) and Melvin Carriker (1934) regarding the taxonomic standing of the population of Myrmeciza hemimelaena, a widespread southern Amazonian antbird, that occurs in lower Andean elevations in San Martín, Peru. Zimmer had described a new subspecies, M. h. castanea, from the Moyobamba Valley, but Carriker, on the basis of specimens he collected at the same elevation in an adjoining valley, could not find morphological differences between his specimens and the widespread nominate form of M. hemimelaena. Both authors were correct. Two cryptic sister taxa coexist in the foothills of San Martín. Diagnostic vocal and morphological characters and syntopy confirm their status as distinct species. Myrmeciza hemimelaena castanea Zimmer is revived and raised to species status. Concurrently, analysis of the vocalizations and morphology of the lowland population north of the Río Marañón in Peru, the loudsong recording of which initiated the project, revealed that this population was closely related to M. castanea of which it is described as a subspecies, M. c. centunculorum, under the biological species concept. The discovery that there are two cryptic species in the Myrmeciza hemimelaena complex exemplifies the continuing need to pursue field knowledge and analysis of avian species limits in the Neotropics required for the development of conservation strategies as well as phylogenetic understanding.
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