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Mori, S., & Becker, P. (1991). Flooding affects survival of Lecythidaceae in terra firme forest near Manaus, Brazil. Biotropica, 23, 87–90.
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Ferreira, L. V., & Rankin-de-Merona, J. (1998). Floristic composition and structure of a one- hectare plot in terra firme forest in central Amazonia. In Forest biodiversity in North, Central, and South America and the Caribbean research and monitoring (Vol. 22). UNESCO and the Parthenon Pub. Corp. Carnforth.
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Mesquita, R. (1995). Flower visitors of Clusia nemorosa G.F.W. Meyer (Clusiaceae) in an Amazonian white-sand campina. Biotropica, 27(2), 254–257.
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Henderson, A., Fischer, B., Scariot, A., Paheco, M., & Pardini, R. (2000). Flowering phenology of a palm comunity in a central Amazon Forest. Brittonia, 52(2), 149–159.
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Vasconcelos, H. L. (1997). Foraging activity of an Amazonian leaf-cutting ant: responses to changes in the availability of woody plants and to previous plant damage. Oecologia, 112(3), 370–378.
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Vasconcelos, H. L. (1990). Foraging activity of two species of leaf-cutting ants (Atta) in a primary forest of central Amazon. Insectes Sociaux, 37(2), 131–145.
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Radtke, M. G., da Fonseca, C. R. V., & Williamson, G. B. (2008). Forest fragment size effects on dung beetle communities. Biological Conservation, 141(3), 613–614.
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Cramer, J., Mesquita, R., & Williamson, G. B. (2007). Forest fragmentation differentially affects seed dispersal of large and small-seeded tropical trees. Biological Conservation, 137(3), 415–423.
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Scariot, A. (1999). Forest fragmentation: effects on palm diversity in central Amazonia. Journal of Ecology, 87, 66–76.
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Carvalho, K. S., & Vasconcelos, H. L. (1999). Forest fragmentation in central Amazonia and its effects on litter-dwelling ants. Biological Conservation, 91, 151–158.
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Cramer, J., Mesquita, R., Bentos, T. V., Moser, B., & Williamson, G. B. (2007). Forest fragmentation reduces seed dispersal of Duckeodendron cestroides, a Central Amazon endemic. Biotropica, 39(6), 709–718.
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Fiaschi, P., Frodin, D. G., & Plunkett, G. M. (1982). Four new species of the Didymopanax group of Schefflera (Araliaceae) from the Brazilian Amazon. Brittonia, 60(3), 274–286.
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Hooper, E. R., & Ashton, M. S. (2020). Fragmentation reduces community-wide taxonomic and functional diversity of dispersed tree seeds in the Central Amazon. Ecological Applications, 30(5), e02093. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1002/eap.2093
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Cogni, R., Fernandes, G. W., Betsabé, R., Guerra, C., Marinelli, E., Jurinitz, C. F., Vieira, D. L. M., Zuanon, J., & Venticinque, E. M. (2003). Galling insects (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) survive inundation during host plant flooding in Central Amazon. Biotropica, 35(1), 115–119.
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Lepsch-Cunha, N., Kajeyama, P. Y., & Vemovsky, B. R. (1999). Genetic diversity of Couratari multiflora and Couratari guianensis (Lecythidaceae): Consequences of two types of rarity in central Amazonia. Biodiversity and Conservation, 8, 1205–1218.
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Dick, C. (2001). Genetic rescue of remnant tropical trees by an alien pollinator. Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B, 268, 2391–2396.
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Oliveira, A. A., & Daly, D. C. (1999). Geographic distribution of tree species occuring in the region of Manaus, Brazil: implications for regional diversity and conservation. Biodiversity and Conservation, 8(9), 1245–1259.
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Weigand, A., Abrahamczyk, S., Aubin, I., Bita‐Nicolae, C., Bruelheide, H., I. Carvajal‐Hernández, C., Cicuzza, D., Nascimento da Costa, L. E., Csiky, J., Dengler, J., Gasper, A. L., Guerin, G. R., Haider, S., Hernández‐Rojas, A., Jandt, U., Reyes‐Chávez, J., Karger, D. N., Khine, P. K., Kluge, J., … Kessler, M. (2020). Global fern and lycophyte richness explained: How regional and local factors shape plot richness. Journal of Biogeography, 47(1), 59–71. https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.13782
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Vasconcelos, H. L., & Delabie, J. H. C. (2000). Ground ant communities from central Amazonia forest fragments. In Sampling ground-dwelling ants - case studies from the world’s rain forests (pp. 59–69). Curtin University of Technology - School of Environmental Biology - Bulletin no 18.
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Nery, A. S., & Vasconcelos, H. L. (2003). Growth and survival of incipient ant (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) colonies in two Amazonian ant- plants: effects of habitat, host-plant, and mode of colony founding. Sociobiology, 41(3), 1–12.
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