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195 resources-
Gascon, C. (1991). Breeding of Leptodactylus knudseni: Responses to rainfall variation. Copeia, 1991(1), 248–252.
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Gascon, C. (1993). Breeding-habitat use by Amazonian primary-forest frogs species at forest edge. Biodiversity and Conservation, 2, 38–444.
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Juncá, F. A., Altig, R., & Gascon, C. (1994). Breeding biology of Colostethus stepheni: a dendrobatid frog with a nontransported nidicolous tadpole. Copeia, 1994(3), 747–750.
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Gascon, C. (1994). Bottom-nets as a new method to quantitatively sample tadpole populations. Revista Brasileira de Zoologia, 11(2), 355–359.
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Cruz-Neto, A. P., & Gordo, M. (1996). Body temperature and thermoregulatory behaviour of the lizard Ameiva ameiva in central Amazonian forests. Studies on Neotropical Fauna and Environmental, 31(1), 11–16.
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Karr, J. R., Blake, J., Robinson, S., & Bierregaard Jr., R. O. (1990). Birds of four Neotropical. In Four Neotropical Rainforests (pp. 237–269). Yale Univ. Press.
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Stouffer, P. C. (2020). Birds in fragmented Amazonian rainforest: Lessons from 40 years at the Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project. The Condor, 122(3), duaa005. https://doi.org/10.1093/condor/duaa005
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Bierregaard Jr., R. O., & Lovejoy, T. E. (1988). Birds in Amazonian forest fragments: Effects of insularization. Acta XIX, 2, 1564–1579.
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Borges, S., & Stouffer, P. C. (1999). Bird communities in two types of anthropogenic successional vegetation in central Amazonia. The Condor, 101(3), 529–536.
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Rutt, C. L., Jirinec, V., Cohn‐Haft, M., Laurance, W. F., & Stouffer, P. C. (2019). Avian ecological succession in the Amazon: A long‐term case study following experimental deforestation. Ecology and Evolution, 9(24), 13850–13861. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5822
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Bierregaard Jr., R. O. (1990). Avian communities in the understory of Amazonian forest fragments. In Biogeography and Ecology of Forest Bird Communities (pp. 333–343). SPB Academic Publishing.
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Figueira, L., Tella, J. L., Camargo, U. M., & Ferraz, G. (2015). Autonomous sound monitoring shows higher use of Amazon old growth than secondary forest by parrots. Biological Conservation, 184, 27–35.
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Zimmerman, B. L. (1994). Audio strip transects. In Measuring and Monitoring Biological Diversity - Standard Methods for Amphibians (pp. 92–96). Smithsonian Intitution Press.
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Gascon, C. (1992). Aquatic predators and tadpole prey at a central Amazonian site: field data and experimental manipulations. Ecology, 73(3), 971–980.
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Rocha, R., Silva, I., dos Reis, M. A., & Rosa, G. (2012). Another frog on the menu: predation of Trachops cirrhosis (Chiroptera: Phyllostomidae) upon Osteocephalus oophagus (Anura: Hylidae). Chiroptera Neotropical, 18(2), 1136–1138.
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Hero, J. M. (1990). An illustrated key to tadpoles occurring in the Central Amazon rainforest, Manaus, Amazonas, Brazil. Amazoniana, 11(2), 201–262.
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Zimmerman, B., & Simberloff, D. (1996). An historical interpretation of habitat use by frogs in a central Amazonian forest. Journal of Biogeography, 23(1), 27–46.
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Rodriguez, B. H., & Hopkins, M. J. G. (2000). Ametrida centurio visiting flowers of Parkia pendula (Mimosaceae) in Brazil. Bat Research Notes, 41(3), 70–71.
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Muñoz, A. P., Kéry, M., Martins, P. V., & Ferraz, G. (2018). Age effects on survival of Amazon forest birds and the latitudinal gradient in bird survival. The Auk, 135(2), 299–313.
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Oliveira, S. N. (2006). Abundance body size and movement patterns of a tropical treefrog in continuous and fragmented forests in the Brazilian Amazon. Biological Conservation, 128(3), 308–315.
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