Guinea-Bissau Nationwide

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West Africa > Guinea-Bissau > Guinea-Bissau Nationwide

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Summary

Leaflet | Map data: © OpenStreetMap, SRTM | Map style: © OpenTopoMap (CC-BY-SA), © OpenStreetMap
  • It has been estimated that 1,908 (CI: 923-6,121) individuals occur in Guinea-Bissau.
  • The chimpanzee population trend is unknown.
  • This site has a total size of 36,125 km².
  • No conservation interventions were reported that were implemented at the national level.
  • Guinea-Bissau has designated 34 protected areas, which account for 16% and 10% of the terrestrial and marine national territory, respectively.
  • Western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) are present in Guinea-Bissau.


Site characteristics

Guinea-Bissau (36,125 km²) is located within the Guinean forest-savannah mosaic ecoregion, which separates the Guinean moist forests in the south and the West Sudanian savanna in the north (12.1775473, -14.8490914) (Olson et al., 2001). The climate is characterized by a hot wet season (June-October) and a hot dry season (November-May) (Bersacola et al. 2018). During wet season, the average monthly rainfall is 298.2 mm (World Bank, 2018b). During the rest of the year, rain is almost absent. The lowest and highest annual temperatures are during December-January (25°C) and May (29°C). More humid forest is covering the south and drier savannah-riparian forest mosaics is found in the east (Bersacola et al., 2018). Guinea-Bissau contains 34 PAs, which account for 16% and 10% of the terrestrial and marine national territory (UNEP-WCMC & IUCN, 2018). Most Protected areas are managed by the Institute for Biodiversity and Protected Areas (IBAP). After chimpanzees were erroneously considered to be extinct in Guinea-Bissau (Lee et al. 1988), recent field surveys confirmed, that Guinea-Bissau represents the western-most limit of the endangered West African Chimpanzee Pan troglodytes verus (Sousa et al. 2005).

Table 1. Basic site information for Guinea-Bissau Nationwide

Species 'Pan troglodytes verus
Area 36,125 km²
Coordinates Lat: 12.04 , Lon: -15.02
Type of site Unknown
Habitat types Savanna, Subtropical/tropical moist lowland forest, Subtropical/tropical heavily degraded former forest, Agricultural land
Type of governance

IUCN habitat categories Site designations

Ape status

Information concerning chimpanzee population status remain scarce (Torres et al. 2010). In 1996, Gippoliti et al. 2003 estimated chimpanzee numbers between 600 and 1000 individuals, but recent surveys suggest higher numbers. Chimpanzees are distributed in Guinea-Bissau across the south of the Corubal River. In two protected areas, Cantanhez National Park and Cufada Lagoons Natural Park, chimpanzee occurrence was confirmed (Casanova and Sousa 2007; Brugière et al. 2009). In Lagoas de Cufada Natural Park, 137 individuals and a nest density of 0.22 nest builders per km² were estimated (Carvalho, Marques & Vicente 2013). In the Boé region, estimates range from 700 individuals (Serra, Silva & Lopes 2007) to 1465-4415 individuals (Francisco & Wenceslau 2014). In the Cantanhez Region (i.e., Cantanhez Forest NP and surrounding areas like Cacine and Catio), the population size was estimated between 376 and 2,632 individuals (Torres et al. 2010). Within three key forests in central Cantanhez, 281 individuals and a density of 1.1-6.18 weaned individuals/km² was estimated (depending on assumption made for nest reuse in palm trees, Sousa et al. 2011). Recent research suggests that at least 12 chimpanzee communities occur in Cantanhez Forest NP and research is ongoing by Kimberley Hockings and colleagues to assess population numbers (Hockings in prep.).

Table 2. Ape population estimates reported for Guinea-Bissau Nationwide

Species Year Occurrence Encounter or vistation rate (nests/km; ind/day) Density estimate [ind./ km²] (95% CI) Abundance estimate (95% CI) Survey area Sampling method Analytical framework Source Comments A.P.E.S. database ID
Pan troglodytes verus 1996 600-1,000 Nationwide Informed guess Gippoliti et al. 2003 This estimate is now considered an underestimate (Goedmakers & Hockings pers. com.)
Pan troglodytes verus 2015 1,908 (923-6,121) Nationwide Other Heinicke et al. 2019 Based on density distribution predicted for geographic range of western chimpanzees using models and transect survey data

Threats

Due to high levels of exploitation, loss of habitat and habitat quality as a result of human activities, chimpanzee populations in Guinea-Bissau have probably experienced a significant population reduction in the past 20 to 30 years (IUCN 2011).

Conservation activities

Chimbo Foundation works on community-based protection in the whole sector of Boé, an important chimpanzee habitat (IUCN & Chimbo 2016). The ”Instituto da Biodiversidade e das Areas Protegidas (IBAP)” implements conservation measurements such as law enforcement, livelihood improvement, and awareness creation. However, conservation interventions that were implemented at the national level were not reported.

Challenges

Table 5. Challenges reported for Guinea-Bissau Nationwide

Challenges Specific challenges Source Year(s)
4 Institutional support 4.1 Lack of law enforcement IUCN & Chimbo 2016
2 Resources and capacity 2.3 General lack of funding Torres et al. 2010
2 Resources and capacity 2.2 Lack of staff Carvalho et al. 2013

Enablers

Table 6. Enablers reported for Guinea-Bissau Nationwide

Enablers Specific enablers Source Year(s)
1 Site management
2 Resources and capacity
3 Engaged community
4 Institutional support
5 Ecological context
6 Safety and stability

Research activities

Geographical research gaps for chimpanzees in Guinea-Bissau are limited to areas north of the Corubal river in the Bafata region and around Canjadude in Boé (Bersacola et al. 2018). Within Guinea-Bissau, research on primates mainly focused on areas south of the Corubal river, coinciding with the region with highest forest cover (Tombali) and where most of the chimpanzee population in Guinea-Bissau occur (Boé, Tombali and Quinara regions). There are ongoing research efforts to monitor and collect behavioural data on chimpanzee communities in Cantanhez Forest NP (Hockings & Sousa 2012; Hockings & Sousa 2013; Bessa, Sousa & Hockings 2015; Bersacola et al. 2018; Vieira et al 2019; Bersacola 2019 (PhD thesis); Bessa in prep (PhD thesis)). Research has been carried out in co-operation with national and local authorities, establishing a system for the systematic monitoring and management (Casanova and Sousa, 2007). As part of a Darwin funded project led by Kimberley Hockings (University of Exeter) a biodiversity monitoring project is set up across Cantanhez with IBAP as a project partner.

Documented behaviours

Exposure to climate change impacts

External links

Relevant datasets

References

Bersacola, E., Bessa, J., Frazão-Moreira, A., Biro, D., Sousa, C., & Hockings, K. J. 2018. Primate occurrence across a human-impacted landscape in Guinea-Bissau and neighbouring regions in West Africa: using a systematic literature review to highlight the next conservation steps. PeerJ, 6, e4847.

Binczik, A., Roig-Boixeda, P., Heymann, E. W., & Waltert, M. 2017. Conservation of chimpanzees Pan troglodytes verus and other primates depends on forest patches in a West African savannah landscape. Oryx, 1–8.

Born Free Foundation. 2019. Born Free helps relocate two rescued chimps to sanctuary. Online: www.bornfree.org.uk

Carvalho, J. S., Marques, T. A., & Vicente, L. 2013. Population Status of Pan troglodytes verus in Lagoas de Cufada Natural Park, Guinea-Bissau. PLoS ONE, 8(8), 1–10.

Casanova, C. and C. Sousa. 2006. Distribuição das comuni- dades de chimpanzés (Pan troglodytes verus) na região costeira da República da Guiné-Bissau e a sua relação com as comunidades humanas locais. Mission Report (March 2006). Lisboa, Portugal.

Dias et al. 2019. Density and distribution of western chimpanzees around a bauxite deposit in the Boé Sector, Guinea-Bissau. American Journal of Primatology 81(9): e23047

Francisco, J., & Wenceslau, C. 2014. Report?: Bauxite Mining and Chimpanzees Population Distribution , a case study in the Boé sector, Guinea - Bissau. 37.

Gippoliti S et al. 2003. Guinea-Bissau, in Kormos, R. Boesch, C., Bakarr, M.I. & Butynski, T.M. [eds.] Status Survey and Conservation Action Plan, IUCN/SSC Primate Specialist Group. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland and Cambridge, UK

Heinicke et al. 2019. Advancing conservation planning for western chimpanzees using IUCN SSC A.P.E.S. – the case of a taxon-specific database. Environmental Research Letters, https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ab1379

Hockings KJ & Sousa C. 2013. Human-Chimpanzee Sympatry and Interactions in Cantanhez National Park, Guinea-Bissau: Current Research and Future Directions. Primate Conservation, 26(1), 57–65.

IUCN. 2016. Protected Area Categories. Available at https://www.iucn.org/theme/ protected-areas/about/protected-area-categories (accessed on 11 February 2018).

IUCN. 2018. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Available at http://www. iucnredlist.org/ (accessed on 11 February 2018).

IUCN, & Chimbo. 2016. The conservation of the Savannah Chimpanzees of Guinea Bissau and Senegal. (February), 1–19. Retrieved from http://chimbo.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/The-conservation-of-the-Savannah-Chimpanzees-of-Guinea-Bissau-and-Senegal-Report-Workshop-Beli-14-16.2.2016.pdf

Kühl, H. S., Kalan, A. K., Arandjelovic, M., Aubert, F., D’Auvergne, L., Goedmakers, A., … Boesch, C. 2016. Chimpanzee accumulative stone throwing. Scientific Reports, 6(February 2016), 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep22219

Miguel, R., Sá, M., & Ferreira, M. 2012. The Trade and Ethnobiological Use of chimapanzee body part. TRAFFIC Bulletin, 24(1), 31–34.

Olson DM et al. 2001. Terrestrial Ecoregions of the World: A New Map of Life on Earth: A new global map of terrestrial ecoregions provides an innovative tool for conserving biodiversity. BioScience 51(11): 933-938

Serra A et al. 2007. Étude de faisabilité du projet «Développement touristique de la Boé au profit de la conservation des Chimpanzés et des populations locales». 1–50. Retrieved from http://chimbo.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/Etude-de-Faisabilite´-C.-Schwarz-Silva-2007.pdf

Sousa, J., Barata, A. V, Sousa, C., Casanova, C. C. N., & Vicente, L. 2011. Chimpanzee oil-palm use in southern Cantanhez National Park, Guinea-Bissau. American Journal of Primatology, 73(5), 485–497. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajp.20926

Sousa JV. 2007. Densidade de Pan troglodytes verus e Veículos de Sensibilização Ambiental: Quatro Florestas de Cantanhez, República da Guiné-Bissau. Lisboa: Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade de Lisboa. 130 p.

Sousa FM. 2009. Densidade de Pan troglodytes verus e uso de Recursos Naturais pela População Local, (Gadamael, República da Guiné-Bissau). Lisbon: Lisbon University, Sciences Faculty. 81 p.

Sousa J. 2008. Densidade de Pan troglodytes verus (Chimpanzé da África Ocidental) no Parque Natural das Lagoas de Cufada, República da Guiné-Bissau. Lisbon: Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas, Universidade Nova de Lisboa. 55 p

Torres, J., Brito, J. C., Vasconcelos, M. J., Catarino, L., Gonçalves, J., & Honrado, J. 2010. Ensemble models of habitat suitability relate chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) conservation to forest and landscape dynamics in Western Africa. Biological Conservation, 143(2), 416–425.

Vieira WF et al. 2019. A comparison of methods to determine chimpanzee home-range size in a forest–farm mosaic at Madina in Cantanhez National Park, Guinea-Bissau. Primates 60(4): 355-365.

World Bank. 2018a. Rural population | Data. Available at https://data.worldbank.org/ indicator/SP.RUR.TOTL (accessed on 11 February 2018).

World Bank. 2018b. Climate Change Knowledge Portal 2.0. Available at http://sdwebx.worldbank.org/climateportal/ (accessed on 11 February 2018).


Page created by: A.P.E.S. Wiki Team, Kimberley Hockings, Elena Bersacola, Joana Bessa & Marina Ramon Date: NA