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109 resources-
Luther, D., Cooper, J., Wolfe, J., Bierregaard, R., Gonzalez, A., & Lovejoy, T. (2020). Tropical forest fragmentation and isolation: Is community decay a random process? Global Ecology and Conservation, 23, e01168. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gecco.2020.e01168
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Lovejoy, T. E. (1985). Minimum size for bird species and avian habitats. Acta XVIII, 324–327.
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Lenz, B. B., & dos Reis, A. M. (2011). Harpy- eagle-primate interactions in the Central Amazon. Wilson Journal of Ornithology, 123(2), 404–408.
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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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Laurance, S., & Gomez, M. S. (2005). Clearing width and movements of understory rainforest birds. Biotropica, 37(1), 149–152.
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Laurance, S. G., Stouffer, P., & Laurance, W. F. (2004). Effects of road clearings on movements patterns of understory rainforest birds in central Amazonia. Conservation Biology, 18(4), 1099–1109.
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Laurance, S. G. W. (2004). Responses of understory rain forest birds to road edges in Central Amazonia. Ecological Applications, 14(3), 1344–1357.
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Klein, B. C., Harper, L. H., Bierregaard, R. O., & Powell, G. V. N. (1988). Nesting and feeding behavior of the Ornate Hawk-eagle near Manaus, Brazil. The Condor, 90(1), 239–241.
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Klein, B. C., & Bierregaard, R. O. (1988). Movement and calling behavior of the Lined Forest-falcon (Micrastur gilvicollis) in the Brazilian Amazon. The Condor, 90(2), 497–499.
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Klein, B. C., & Bierregaard Jr., R. O. (1988). Capture and telemetry techniques for the lined forest falcon, Micrastur gilvicollis. Journal of Raptor Research, 22(1), 29.
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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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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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Johnson, E. I., & Wolf, J. D. (2017). Molting in Neotropical Birds: Life History and Forest Fragmentation. CRC Press.
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Johnson, E. I., Vargas, C. F., Costa, T. V. V., & Andretti, C. B. (2010). A range extension and ecology of Boat-billed Tody-Tyrant Hemitriccus josephinae in central Amazonian Brazil. Ulletin of the British Ornithologists’ Club, 130(4), 1–11.
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Johnson, E. I., Stouffer, P. C., & Vargas, C. F. (2011). Diversity, biomass, and trophic structure of a central Amazonian bird community. Revista Brasileira de Ornitologia, 19(1), 1–16.
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Johnson, E. I., Stouffer, P. C., & Bierregaard Jr., R. O. (2012). The phenology of molting, breeding and their overlap in central Amazonian birds. Journal of Avian Biology, 43, 141–154.
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Izzo, T. J., Julião, G. R., Almada, E., & Fernades, G. W. . (2006). Hiding From Defenders: Localized Chemical Modification on the Leaves of an Amazonian Ant-Plant Induced by a Gall- Making Insect (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae). Sociobiology, 48(2), 1–11.
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Hernández-Palma, A., & Stouffer, P. C. (2018). Matrix and area effects on the nutritional condition of understory birds in Amazonian rainforest fragments. Perpspectives in Ecology and Conservation, 16(3), 139–145.
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Harper, L. H. (1989). The persistence of ant-following birds in small Amazonian forest fragments. Acta Amazonica, 19, 249–263.
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Gonçálves, C., López-Baucells, A., & Rocha, R. (2017). Opportunistic predation of a silky short- tailed bat (Carollia brevicauda) by a tawny- bellied screech-owl (Megascops watsonii), with a compilation of predation events upon bats entangled in mist-nets. Barbastella Journal of Bat Research, 10(1), 41–46.
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