Author: elunedprice
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First conservation rehabilitation centre for golden-headed lion tamarins

Thursday 26 March 2026 saw the inauguration of the first conservation rehabilitation centre for the endangered golden headed lion tamarins of Bahia, funded by Tamarin Trust. The centre is based at the State University of Santa Cruz in Ilheus. Golden-headed lion tamarins are facing severe threats as agricultural practices change in their coastal Atlantic forest Read more
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Become a Friend of Tamarin Trust
We are very excited to launch our new scheme, Friends of Tamarin Trust. With a small monthly donation, you will enable us to expand our work in South America with tamarins and marmosets. If you become a Friend, a portion of your donation each year will go towards the tree planting initiative we are supporting Read more
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Pied tamarin conservation update
Professor Marcelo Gordo at the Conservation Biology Laboratory, Federal University of Amazonas (UFAM) leads the project to protect the critically endangered pied tamarin in and around the rapidly expanding city of Manaus, where urban growth has caused severe habitat loss and fragmentation. The city now contains a mosaic of small forest fragments separated by roads, Read more
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Tamarin Trust’s conservation impact
As we come to the end of our first two years, we thought you would be interested to see just how much we have achieved already with your support. As you can see from the figure below, most of the funds we’ve raised have gone directly to frontline conservation efforts. We have excellent relationships with Brazilian Read more
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First birth in new buffy-headed marmoset breeding programme
In wonderful news, the first birth in the newly established ex-situ conservation breeding programme for the critically endangered buffy-headed marmoset (Callithrix flaviceps), has occurred at the Mountain Marmoset Conservation Centre at Viçosa, Minas Gerais, Brazil. This is certainly the rarest marmoset species on earth, and this birth represents a huge milestone for the future conservation Read more
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Video update: Helping golden-headed lion tamarins at risk in Bahia
Here is a quick video update on our collaboration with the Golden-Headed Lion Tamarin Conservation Project. Tamarin Trust is supporting efforts to help this beautiful species in its home state of Bahia, Brazil. These monkeys are at increasing threat from habitat loss, forcing them to cross roads and power lines, and raid shops for food. Read more
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Hear directly from participants on our primate conservation husbandry workshop in Brazil
In December of 2025, Tamarin Trust, Zoomelhor and our partners in Brazil ran a primate conservation husbandry workshop at Sapucaia zoo, Rio Grande do Sul. We had a hugely positive response and we can now share a video featuring comments from participants: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TdOgoub2qhg In the video you will hear from Leandro Jerusalinsky, who works with Read more
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Tamarin Trust’s partners say thank you for your support
Our partners in Brazil are very grateful for your support and have sent messages of thanks. Please take a look at the video below: The people you will hear from are: Your help has been incredibly important for all these projects, and together we can continue to secure a future for these wonderful primates. We Read more
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Conservation husbandry workshop in Rio Grande do Sul
At the beginning of December 2025, Tamarin Trust, with our partners Zoomelhor, coordinated a conservation husbandry workshop in southern Brazil, bringing together rescue centres, zoos, universities, and government agencies to improve the management of primates in human care and threatened primate populations in the wild. The workshop, in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Read more
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Colombia’s endemic tamarins: 20 years of conservation lead to real success
Tamarin Trust’s founder, Dom Wormell, has been working for the conservation of tamarins in Colombia for two decades. Here he describes what he experienced in a trip to the country in September 2025, and how it contrasts with what he found on his first visit. “More than twenty years ago, I found myself in a Read more
Saving the world’s smallest monkeys from extinction