“…In creating our database, we were inspired by other freely available databases that were created as a result of collaborative efforts by often large numbers of research teams, including the PREDICTS (Projecting Responses of Ecological Diversity In Changing Terrestrial Systems) database, GrassPlot (a database of scale-dependent phytodiversity patterns in Palaearctic grasslands), TRY (a global database of plant traits) and the national assessment of wildlife mortality in Ecuador [38][39][40][41][42]. Our database (GPRD) includes, where available, the following information for each entry: the data source (e.g., database, anecdote, research paper, social media, or donated private data), the primate species' scientific and common names and Red List status, the year and month of the incident observation, the location (e.g., country, state, district, National Park, town/city, road), GIS coordinates (i.e., latitude and longitude), demographic details (e.g., number of individuals killed, including the age and sex).…”