Bibliography and Index of the Sirenia and Desmostylia  


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"Kendall, Sarita"

 
 
Kendall, Sarita (detail)
   
1999
Dolphins as people, manatees as maggots: incorporating indigenous knowledge and story into environmental education in the Colombian Amazon. In: Indigenous knowledge in/as environmental education processes.
EEASA Monograph No. 3: 5-12. Jan. 1999.
x
 
Kendall, Sarita (detail)
   
2003
La historia de Airuwe.
Bogotá, Fundación Omacha: 1-24. Illus.
–Pop. acc. of an orphaned Amazonian manatee calf rehabilitated, released, and radiotracked in Colombia by the Omacha Foundation.
 
 
Kendall, Sarita; Orozco, Diana Luz (detail)
   
2003
El árbol de los manatíes: caza, concertación y conservación en la amazonia colombiana. In: C. Campos-Rozo & A. Ulloa (eds.), Fauna socializada: tendencias en el manejo participativo de la fauna en América Latina.
?Bogotá, Fundación Natura, MacArthur Foundation & Instituto Colombiano de Antropología y Historia: 215-237. 10 figs.
 
 
Kendall, Sarita; et al. (detail)
   
2004
Los manatíes del Amazonas.
Bogotá, Fundación Omacha: 1-24. Illus.
–An attractive paperback booklet giving a gen. acc. of Amazonian manatee natural history, conservation, and folklore. Besides Kendall, 24 other coauthors are credited with contributions to the text.
 
 
Marmontel, Miriam; Rosas, Fernando C. Weber; Kendall, Sarita (detail)
   
2012
The Amazonian manatee. Chap. 5 in: E. M. Hines et al. (eds.), Sirenian conservation: issues and strategies in developing countries (q.v.).
Gainesville, University Press of Florida (xiv + 326): 47-53. 1 map.
 
 
Aragones, Lemnuel V.; LaCommare, Katherine S.; Kendall, Sarita; Castelblanco-Martinez, Delma Nataly; Gonzalez-Socoloske, Daniel (detail)
   
2012b
Boat- and land-based surveys for sirenians. Chap. 20 in: E. M. Hines et al. (eds.), Sirenian conservation: issues and strategies in developing countries (q.v.).
Gainesville, University Press of Florida (xiv + 326): 179-185. 3 tabs. 2 figs.
 
 
Aragones, Lemnuel V.; Marmontel, Miriam; Kendall, Sarita (detail)
   
2012c
Working with communities for sirenian conservation. Chap. 24 in: E. M. Hines et al. (eds.), Sirenian conservation: issues and strategies in developing countries (q.v.).
Gainesville, University Press of Florida (xiv + 326): 221-227.
–Includes box essay by Kanjana Adulyanukosol (p. 224, "Thailand").
 
 
Kendall, Sarita (detail)
   
2013
Caminos para la conservación: monitoreo y manejo de la fauna acuática con la comunidad.
Puerto Nariño, Colombia, Fundación Natütama: [1-67]. Illus.
–Booklet on aquatic animal conservation intended for distribution to teachers, community leaders, and other citizens in the Amazon region of Colombia. PDF available at http://sirenian.org/library/. TI, 19-31, 59.
 
 
Castelblanco-Martínez, Delma Nataly; Kendall, Sarita; Orozco, D. L.; González, K. A. (detail)
   
2015
La conservación de los manatíes (Trichechus inunguis y Trichechus manatus) en áreas no protegida de Colombia. In: E. Payán, C. A. Lasso, & C. Castaño-Uribe (eds.), Conservación de grandes vertebrados en áreas no protegidas de Colombia.
Inst. de Investigación de Recursos Biológicos Alexander von Humboldt, 81-98.
 
 
Kendall, Sarita (detail)
   
2020
Manatee trees: culture and conservation in Amazonia.
Bogotá, Fundación Natutama, 174 pp. Illus.
–ABSTRACT: This is the story of a community-based program to understand and protect the Amazonian manatee. It shows how working with an indigenous community to revive manatee stories and culture made it possible to stop manatee hunting in the Puerto Nariño area of the Colombian Amazon. An orphaned calf, Airuwe, was raised and released into the wild, while Ticuna fishermen and former hunters followed the manatees, discovering their seasonal habitats and interpreting their life under the water. Regular monitoring of the lakes and rivers resulted in over 5000 sightings in 16 years, establishing detailed migration patterns. Ticuna elders helped us to see the manatee from within their culture, giving us a different perspective on the relationship between people and animals. Out of this developed a long-term conservation and education program focused on the Natutama Interpretation Centre, run by Ticuna educators and guides.

Daryl P. Domning, Research Associate, Department of Paleobiology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. 20560, and Laboratory of Evolutionary Biology, Department of Anatomy, College of Medicine, Howard University, Washington, D.C. 20059.
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