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  • Book
    Maximiliano Nardelli, Juan Ignacio Túnez, editors.
    Summary: Although all living beings modify their environment, human beings have acquired the ability to do so on a superlative space-time scale. As a result of industrialization and the use of new technologies, the anthropogenic impact has been increasing in the last centuries, causing reductions in the sizes or the extinction of numerous wild populations. In this sense, from the field of conservation genetics, various efforts have been made in recent decades to provide new knowledge that contributes to the conservation of populations, species, and habitats. In this book, we summarize the concrete contributions of researchers to the conservation of the Neotropical mammals using Molecular Ecology techniques. The book is divided into three major sections. The first section provides an up-to-date review of the conservation status of Neotropical mammals, the applications of the molecular markers in its conservation, and the use of non-invasive and forensic genetic techniques. The second and third sections present, respectively, a series of case studies in various species or taxonomic groups of Neotropical mammals.

    Contents:
    Chapter 1 - Introduction
    Section 1 - Background and Technical Notes
    Chapter 2 - Conservation status of Neotropical mammals: A review
    Chapter 3 - The use of molecular markers in Neotropical mammal conservation
    Chapter 4 - Non-invasive genetic sampling techniques applied to conservation genetic studies in mammals
    Chapter 5 - Landscape Genomics in wildlife conservation
    Chapter 6 - The use of forensic DNA on the conservation of Neotropical mammals
    Chapter 7 - Leveraging conservation through massive sequencing technologies
    Chapter 8 - The importance of considering genetic factors in population viability analysis
    Section 2 - Case studies
    Chapter 9 - Effects of the sample sizes in the determination of the true number of haplogroups within a species with conservation purposes: the case of the Cebus albifrons in Ecuador, and the cases of the jaguarundi, the kinkajou and the coati throughout Latin America
    Chapter 10 - Molecular Ecology Approaches to Study Neotropical Bats
    Chapter 11 - Phylogeographic approximation of the subspecies Odocoileus virginianus veraecrusis (Goldman & Kellogg 1940) in the South Eastern Coastal Plain, Mexico.-Chapter 12 - Perspectives on Neotropical primate conservation genetics
    Chapter 13 - The use of Genetic Footprints as a tool to trace the origin of the heavily trafficked White-footed tamarins (Saguinus leucopus) in Colombia
    Chapter 14 - Schrödinger's cat in genetics for the conservation of species in the tropical Andes: bibliographical review of the order Carnivora
    Chapter 15 - Conservation genetics of rodents in Argentina
    Chapter 16 - Conservation genetics of caviomorphs and sigmodontine rodents in the Neotropics.-Chapter 17 - Aquatic Mammals of the Amazon: a review of gene diversity, population structure and phylogeography
    Conclusion
    Chapter 18 - Concluding remarks.
    Digital Access Springer 2021