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Mokross, K., Potts, J. R., Rutt, C. L., & Stouffer, P. C. (2018). What can mixed-species flock movement tell us about the value of Amazonian secondary forests? Insights from spatial behavior. Biotropica, 50(4), 664–673. https://doi.org/10.1111/btp.12557
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Zimmerman, B. L., & Bogart, J. P. (1986). Vocalizations of primary forest frog species in the Central Amazon. Acta Amazonica, 14(3/4), 473–519.
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Wolfe, J. D., Stouffer, P. C., & Seeholzer, F. G. (2014). Variation in tropical bird survival across longitude and guilds: a case study from the Amazon. Oikos, 123(8), 964–970.
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Vasconcelos, H. L. (2002). Variação espaço- temporal na atividade forrageira da saúva (Atta laevigata). Acta Amazonica, 32(1), 141–154.
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Piedade, J. V. C., da Conceição, B. S., & Anciães, M. (2011). Uso de florestas secundárias por aves de sub-bosque em uma paisagem fragmentada na Amazônia central. Acta Amazonica, 42(1), 73–80.
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Picelli, A. M., Ramires, A. C., Masseli, G. S., Pessoa, F. A. C., Viana, L. A., & Kaefer, I. L. (2020). Under the light: high prevalence of haemoparasites in lizards (Reptilia: Squamata) from Central Amazonia revealed by microscopy. Anais Da Academia Brasileira de Ciências, 92(2), e20200428. https://doi.org/10.1590/0001-3765202020200428
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Farneda, F. Z., Rocha, R., López-Baucells, A., Groenenberg, M., Silva, I., Palmeirim, J. M., Bobrowiec, P. E. D., & Meyer, C. F. J. (2015). Trait-related responses to habitat fragmentation in Amazonian bats. Journal of Applied Ecology, 52(5), 1381–1391.
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Vasconcelos, H. L., & Cherrett, J. M. (1996). The effect of wilting in the selection of leaves by the leaf-cutting and Atta laevigata. Entomologia Experimentalis et Applicata, 78(2), 215–220.
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Boyle, S. A., Smith, A. T., Spironello, W. R., & Zartman, C. E. (2013). The Behavioural Ecology of Bearded Sakis (Chiropotes sagulatus) Living in Forest Fragments of Central Brazilian Amazonia. In Evolutionary Ecology and Conservation of Titis, Sakis and Uacaris (pp. 255–261). Cambridge University Press.
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De Marco, P. (1998). The Amazonian campina Dragonfly assemblage: Patterns in microhabitat use and behaviour in a foraging habitat. Odonatologica, 27(2), 239–248.
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Johnson, E. I., & Wolfe, J. D. (2014). Thamnophilidae (Antibird) molt strategies in a Central Amazon rainforest. Wilson Journal of Ornithology, 126(3), 451–462.
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Rocha, R., López-Baucells, A., Farneda, F. Z., Ferreira, D. F., Silva, I., Acácio, M., Palmeirim, J. M., & Meyer, C. F. J. (2020). Second-growth and small forest clearings have little effect on the temporal activity patterns of Amazonian phyllostomid bats. Current Zoology, 66(2), 145–153. https://doi.org/10.1093/cz/zoz042
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Ferreira, D. F., Rocha, R., López‐Baucells, A., Farneda, F. Z., Carreiras, J. M. B., Palmeirim, J. M., & Meyer, C. F. J. (2017). Season-modulated responses of Neotropical bats to forest fragmentation. Ecology and Evolution, 7(11), 4059–4071. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.3005
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Setz, E. Z., & Gaspar, D. A. (1997). Scent-making in free-ranging golden-faced saki monkeys, Pithecia pithecia chrysocephala: sex diffferences and context. Journal of Zoology, 241, 603–611.
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Oliveira, M. L. (1999). Sazonalidade e horário de atividade de abelhas Euglossinae (Hymenoptera, Apidae), em florestas de terra- firme na Amazônia Central. Revista Brasileira de Zoologia, 16(1), 83–90.
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Silva, J. V. C. (2013). Roosting behavior of Leaftossers (Sclerurus) in the Brazilian Amazon: might a lack of butressed trees cause their extinction in small forest fragment? Revista Brasileira de Ornitologia, 21(2), 129–132.
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Baccaro, F. B., Ketelhut, S. M., & de Morais, J. W. (2010). Resource distribution and soil moisture content can regulate bait control in an ant assemblage in Central Amazonian forest. Austral Ecology, 35(3), 274–281.
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Costa-Pereira, R. (2014). Removing clay by stingless bees: load size and moisture selection. Anais Da Academia Brasileira de Ciências, 86(3), 1287–1293.
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Borges, S. (1999). Relative use of secondary forests by cracids in central Amazonia. Ornithol. Neotropical, 10, 77–80.
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Gilbert, K. A. (1997). Red howling monkey use of specific deffecation sites as a parasite avoidance strategy. Animal Behavior, 54(2), 451–455.
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