User:MJF22/Sapajus apella margaritae/Bibliography

Ceballos-Mago, N. (n.d.) Margarita Capuchin Project. Wordpress.

https://margaritacapuchinmonkey.wordpress.com/

This is a published website about the Margarita Island Capuchin Project with references to peer-reviewed articles and journals. This website provides information about the Margarita Island Capuchin population, conservation activities and projects to conserve the species.

Ceballos-Mago, N., Chivers, D.J. (2013). A Critically-Endangered Capuchin (sapajus

apella margaritae) living in Mountain Forest Fragments on Isla de Margarita, Venezuela. In: Marsh, L., Chapman, C. (eds) Primates in Fragments. Developments in Primatology: Progress and Prospects. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-8839-2_13

This is a peer-reviewed chapter out of a published book about developments in primatology. This case study is about the impacts of habitat fragmentation and overexploitation on the critically endangered Margarita Island Capuchin and conservation strategies.

Ceballos-Mago, N., Gonzalez, CE., Chivers, D. (2010). Impact of the Pet Trade on the

Margarita Capuchin Monkey Cebus Apella Margaritae. Endang Species Res 12: 57-68. Pdf

This is a peer-reviewed scientific article and should be reliable as there are credible authors. This endangered species research is about the impact of trade of the Margarita Island Capuchins and provides research data on the population.

Margarita Island Capuchin (Sapajus Apella Margaritae): U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service.

FWS.gov. (n.d.). https://www.fws.gov/species/margarita-island-capuchin-sapajus-apella-margaritae

The United States Fish and Wildlife service is a reliable source of information. There are just a few sentences dedicated to the margarita island capuchins' scientific and common names, animal kingdom, and location in the taxonomic tree.

IUCN. (2015). Margarita Capuchin. IUCN Red List.

https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/4079/70611951

The International Union for Conservation of Nature is a reliable source. Has a page dedicated to the critically endangered Sapajus apella margaritae showing population statistics, geography, habitat and ecology, threats, and conservation actions.