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Zuquim, G., Tuomisto, H., Costa, F. R. C., Braga-Neto, R., & Figueiredo, F. O. G. (2012). Broad scale distribution of ferns and Lycophytes along environmental gradients in central and northern Amazonia, Brazil. Biotropica, 44(6), 752–762.
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Lenz, B. B. (2014). Broad-winged Hawk (Buteo platypterus) predation on a Guianan squirrel (Sciurus aestuans) in the central Amazon. Atualidades Ornitológicas, 181, 27.
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Uriarte, M., Anciães, M., da Silva, T. B., Rubim, P., Johnson, E., & Bruna, E. M. (2011). Building a mechanistic understanding of seed dispersal in human-modified landscapes: a case study with a bird-dispersed tropical understory herb. Ecology, 92(4), 924–937.
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Aguiar-Silva, F. H., Jaudoin, O., Sanaiotti, T. M., Seixas, G. H. F., Duleba, S., & Martins, F. D. (2017). Camera trapping at active Harpy Eagle nests: looking at behavioral interactions under predation risk. Journal of Raptor Research, 51(1), 72–78.
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Jorge, M. L. S. P., & Howe, H. F. (2009). Can forest fragmentation disrupt a conditional mutualism? A case from Central Amazon. Oecologia, 161, 709–718.
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Oliveira, A., & Mori, S. (1999). Central Amazonian terra firme forests: high tree species richness. Biodiversity and Conservation, 8, 1219–1244.
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Vasconcelos, H., & Cherrett, J. M. (1995). Changes in leaf-cutting ant populations (Formicidae: Attini) after the clearing of mature forest in Brazilian Amazonia. Neotropical Fauna and Environment, 30(2), 107–113.
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Izzo, T., & Vasconcelos, H. L. (2002). Cheating the cheater: domatia loss minimizes the effects of ant castration in na Amazonian ant-plant. Oecologia, 133, 200–205.
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Tocher, M. D., Gascon, C., & Meyer, J. (2001). Community composition and breeding success of amazonian frogs in continuous forest and matrix-habitat aquatic sites. In Lessons from Amazonia - The Ecology and Conservation of a Fragmented Forest (pp. 235–247). Yale University Press.
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Malcolm, J. R. (1991). Comparative abundances of Neotropical small mammals by trap height. Journal of Mammalogy, 72(1), 188–192.
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Rocha, R., Gordo, M., & López-Baucells, A. (2016). Completing the menu: addition of Scinax cruentommus and Scinax cf. garbei (Anura: Hylidae) to the diet of Trachops cirrhosus (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae) in Central Amazon. North-Western Journal of Zoology, 12(1), 199–204.
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Lapola, D. M., Bruna, E. M., & Vasconcelos, H. L. (2003). Contrasting responses to introduction by ants in habiting maieta guianensis (melastomataceae). Biotropica, 35(2), 295–300.
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Izzo, T. J., Bruna, E. M., Vasconcelos, H. L., & Inouye, B. D. (2009). Cooperative colony founding alters the outcome of interspecific competition between Amazonian plant-ants. Insectes sociaux. Insectes Sociaux, 56(4), 341–345.
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Bierregaard Jr., R. O., Cohn-Haft, M., & Stotz, D. F. (1997). Cryptic biodiversity: an overlooked species and new subspeices of antbird (Aves; Formicariidae) with a revision of Cercomacra tyrannina in northeastern South America. Ornithological Monographs, 48, 111–128.
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Bruna, E. M., & Oli, M. K. (2005). Demographic consequences of habitat fragmentation for an Amazonian understory plant: Analysis of life- table response experiments. Ecology, 86(7), 1816–1824.
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Stouffer, P. (2007). Density, Territory Size, and Long-term Spatial Dynamics of a Guild of Terrestrial Insectivorous Birds near Manaus, Brazil. The Auk., 124(1), 292–30.
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Rocha, R., Ovaskainen, O., López-Baucells, A., Farneda, F. Z., Ferreira, D. F., Bobrowiec, P. E. D., Cabeza, M., Palmeirim, J. M., & Meyer, C. F. J. (2017). Design matters: an evaluation of the impact of small man-made forest clearings on tropical bats using a before-after-control-impact design. Forest Ecology and Management, 401, 8–16.
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Bernard, E. (2002). Diet, activity and reproduction of bat species (Mammalia, Chiroptera) in Central Amazonia, Brazil. Revista Brasileira de Zoologia, 19(1), 173–188.
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Mestre, L., Cohn-Haft, M., & Dias, M. (2010). Diet and prey availability of terrestrial insectivorous birds prone to extinction in amazonian forest fragments. Brazilian Archieves of Biology and Technology, 53(6), 1371–1381.
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Rylands, A. B., & Neves, A. S. (1991). Diet of a group of howler monkeys (Alouatta seniculus) in an isolated forest patch in Central Amazônia. Primatologia No Brasil, 3, 263–274.
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