Gil Serique was born and raised on the banks of the Tapajos River in
the municipality of Santarem, Brazil. The 8th child of a village teacher
and Jewish merchants. He spent his childhood in close contact with the
wonders of the Amazon rainforest. This formative experience forged a bond
with nature that he has never relinquished.
From 1984-1986, he worked as a tour guide at Varig Airlines' Tropical
Hotel Santarem and then as bilingual reservations agent for Varig Airlines
on the coast of northeast Brazil (in the city of Maceio, Al). In 1988
he returned to his home town of Santarem, where he organised private and
scientific expeditions to the Tapajos River (one of the main tributaries
of the Amazon) and then followed that with two years of the same in the
Rio Negro area near Manaus, one of the largest tributaries of the Amazon.
There, Gil worked as a guide for the travel agency associated with Varig's
world-famous Tropical Hotel.
Returning to Santarem, he organised land and river tours for several
cruise ships, including HMS Ocean Princess, Sea Goddess and Stella Solaris.
During this time he also worked and guided at the Center for Preservation
of Indigenous Art, Culture and Sciences (near Santarem), and worked as
naturalist and lecturer on M/S Explorer, M/S Lyubov Orlova and M/S Mercury.
From 1994 to the present Gil has guided and organised scientific expeditions
to various parts of the Brazilian Amazon. For instance, in 1995 he helped
organise and participated in a University of Quebec expedition that studied
the ecological impact of mercury use in gold mining in the Brazilian Amazon,
and with his late brother, Flavio Serique, participated in the Kota Mama
Expedition organised by the Scientific Exporation Society,;He is credited
the book The Thief at the End of the World by Joe Jackson and dedicated
The Drowning World, by Alan Dean Foster. Recently he contributed to Dr.
Greg Gant on a book about Fordland and currently works in a book project
with Jennifer Davis about the Confederados in the Amazon.
Since 1996 Gil has worked as field director of a research project on
Hyacinth Macaws for the Wildlife Conservation Society (founded in 1895
as the New York Zoological Society). Between September and November 1996
he also helped implement the Amazon Basin's single richest site for wildlife,
the Manu Wildlife Center in the Amazon of southern Peru. He also participated
on the most watched video in history, "The Earth Song," and
has conducted ecotours to various conservation units in Brazil, including
Itatiaia National Park (RJ), Iguassu National Park (PR), Quebrangulo and
Muruci Reserves (AL), northern and southern Pantanal, and the Mamiraua
Ecological Station.
Gil is self-taught, having learned fluent English from his extensive
guiding experience and from reading novels and rainforest ecology books.
He also speaks Spanish and specializes in bird identification and ecology.
His effervescent personality and deep understanding of Amazon ecology
make him a gracious host and an ideal guide and companion in Amazonian
explorations gilserique@gmail.com
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