All Stories

  1. Capitalizing on opportunities provided by pasture sudden death to enhance livestock sustainable management in Brazilian Amazonia
  2. Co‐management of culturally important species: A tool to promote biodiversity conservation and human well‐being
  3. Sampling design may obscure species–area relationships in landscape‐scale field studies
  4. Arboreal ant abundance tracks primary productivity in an Amazonian whitewater river system
  5. Patch-scale biodiversity retention in fragmented landscapes: Reconciling the habitat amount hypothesis with the island biogeography theory
  6. Instability of insular tree communities in an Amazonian mega‐dam is driven by impaired recruitment and altered species composition
  7. Impacts of selective logging management on butterflies in the Amazon
  8. Combining modeling tools to identify conservation priority areas: A case study of the last large-bodied avian frugivore in the Atlantic Forest
  9. Prospects for freshwater turtle population recovery are catalysed by pan-Amazonian community-based management
  10. Prospects for freshwater turtle population recovery are catalysed by pan-Amazonian community-based management
  11. Seasonal dynamics of terrestrial vertebrate abundance between Amazonian flooded and unflooded forests
  12. Seasonal dynamics of terrestrial vertebrate abundance between Amazonian flooded and unflooded forests
  13. Coarse- and fine-scale patterns of distribution and habitat selection places an Amazonian floodplain curassow in double jeopardy
  14. Ecological traits modulate bird species responses to forest fragmentation in an Amazonian anthropogenic archipelago
  15. Oil palm monoculture induces drastic erosion of an Amazonian forest mammal fauna
  16. Creation of forest edges has a global impact on forest vertebrates
  17. Primate responses to anthropogenic habitat disturbance: A pantropical meta-analysis
  18. Measuring local depletion of terrestrial game vertebrates by central-place hunters in rural Amazonia
  19. Woody lianas increase in dominance and maintain compositional integrity across an Amazonian dam-induced fragmented landscape
  20. Community-based population recovery of overexploited Amazonian wildlife
  21. Forest patch isolation drives local extinctions of Amazonian orchid bees in a 26 years old archipelago
  22. Non-random lizard extinctions in land-bridge Amazonian forest islands after 28 years of isolation
  23. Conservation performance of different conservation governance regimes in the Peruvian Amazon
  24. Herpetofaunal responses to anthropogenic forest habitat modification across the neotropics: insights from partitioning β-diversity
  25. The numbers of the beast: Valuation of jaguar ( Panthera onca ) tourism and cattle depredation in the Brazilian Pantanal
  26. Gamebird responses to anthropogenic forest fragmentation and degradation in a southern Amazonian landscape
  27. High mammal species turnover in forest patches immersed in biofuel plantations
  28. Do Community-Managed Forests Work? A Biodiversity Perspective
  29. Enhancing sampling design in mist-net bat surveys by accounting for sample size optimization
  30. Reproductive biology of the endangered wattled curassow (Crax globulosa; Galliformes: Cracidae) in the Juruá River Basin, Western Brazilian Amazonia
  31. Terrestrial mammal responses to habitat structure and quality of remnant riparian forests in an Amazonian cattle-ranching landscape
  32. Continental-scale patterns and climatic drivers of fruiting phenology: A quantitative Neotropical review
  33. Forest Structure, Fruit Production and Frugivore Communities inTerra firmeandVárzeaForests of the Médio Juruá
  34. The database of the PREDICTS (Projecting Responses of Ecological Diversity In Changing Terrestrial Systems) project
  35. Community-based management induces rapid recovery of a high-value tropical freshwater fishery
  36. Too rare for non-timber resource harvest? Meso-scale composition and distribution of arborescent palms in an Amazonian sustainable-use forest
  37. Bushmeat hunting and extinction risk to the world's mammals
  38. Flood pulse dynamics affects exploitation of both aquatic and terrestrial prey by Amazonian floodplain settlements
  39. The dangers of data bias: a study on bees
  40. Abundance signals of amphibians and reptiles indicate strong edge effects in Neotropical fragmented forest landscapes
  41. Habitat fragmentation and the future structure of tree assemblages in a fragmented Atlantic forest landscape
  42. Human population and socioeconomic modulators of conservation performance in 788 Amazonian and Atlantic Forest reserves
  43. Temporal Decay in Timber Species Composition and Value in Amazonian Logging Concessions
  44. Extinction debt on reservoir land-bridge islands
  45. Patterns of local extinction in an Amazonian archipelagic avifauna following 25years of insularization
  46. Multitrophic diversity effects of network degradation
  47. Patterns of plant phenology in Amazonian seasonally flooded and unflooded forests
  48. Hydropower and the future of Amazonian biodiversity
  49. Linking plant phenology to conservation biology
  50. Does biodiversity protect humans against infectious disease? Comment
  51. Dispersal limitation induces long-term biomass collapse in overhunted Amazonian forests
  52. Spatial replacement of dung beetles in edge-affected habitats: biotic homogenization or divergence in fragmented tropical forest landscapes?
  53. Insularization effects on acoustic signals of 2 suboscine Amazonian birds
  54. Toward an integrated monitoring framework to assess the effects of tropical forest degradation and recovery on carbon stocks and biodiversity
  55. Anthropogenic influence on Amazonian forests in pre-history: An ecological perspective
  56. Markedly Divergent Tree Assemblage Responses to Tropical Forest Loss and Fragmentation across a Strong Seasonality Gradient
  57. Environmental Costs of Government-Sponsored Agrarian Settlements in Brazilian Amazonia
  58. Widespread Forest Vertebrate Extinctions Induced by a Mega Hydroelectric Dam in Lowland Amazonia
  59. Policy reversals do not bode well for conservation in Brazilian Amazonia
  60. Predicting local extinctions of Amazonian vertebrates in forest islands created by a mega dam
  61. Upstream and downstream responses of fish assemblages to an eastern Amazonian hydroelectric dam
  62. Geographic comparison of plant genera used in frugivory among the pitheciidsCacajao,Callicebus,Chiropotes, andPithecia
  63. Determinants of spatial behavior of a tropical forest seed predator: The roles of optimal foraging, dietary diversification, and home range defense
  64. Edge-mediated compositional and functional decay of tree assemblages in Amazonian forest islands after 26 years of isolation
  65. Evaluating the use of local ecological knowledge to monitor hunted tropical-forest wildlife over large spatial scales
  66. Effects of reduced-impact logging on medium and large-bodied forest vertebrates in eastern Amazonia
  67. ThePREDICTSdatabase: a global database of how local terrestrial biodiversity responds to human impacts
  68. Brazil's environmental leadership at risk
  69. Pervasive legal threats to protected areas in Brazil
  70. Compromise solutions between conservation and road building in the tropics
  71. Seasonal abundance and breeding habitat occupancy of the Orinoco Goose (Neochen jubata) in western Brazilian Amazonia
  72. Fruit–frugivore interactions in Amazonian seasonally flooded and unflooded forests
  73. Giant otter population responses to habitat expansion and degradation induced by a mega hydroelectric dam
  74. Markedly divergent estimates of Amazon forest carbon density from ground plots and satellites
  75. BIOFRAG - a new database for analyzing BIOdiversity responses to forest FRAGmentation
  76. Predicting Extinction Risk of Brazilian Atlantic Forest Angiosperms
  77. Primate ecology and evolution in amazonia: A belated age of 21stcentury exploration
  78. Pervasive transition of the Brazilian land-use system
  79. Erratum: Corrigendum: Primary forests are irreplaceable for sustaining tropical biodiversity
  80. Ecological correlates of trophic status and frugivory in neotropical primates
  81. Sampling Effort in Neotropical Primate Diet Studies: Collective Gains and Underlying Geographic and Taxonomic Biases
  82. Predicting primate local extinctions within “real-world” forest fragments: A pan-neotropical analysis
  83. Hyperdominance in the Amazonian Tree Flora
  84. Human-Induced Trophic Cascades along the Fecal Detritus Pathway
  85. Biodiversity Conservation Performance of Sustainable-Use Tropical Forest Reserves
  86. Anthropogenic modulators of species-area relationships in Neotropical primates: a continental-scale analysis of fragmented forest landscapes
  87. Dispersal vacuum in the seedling recruitment of a primate-dispersed Amazonian tree
  88. Biodiversity Depends on Logging Recovery Time
  89. Future deforestation drivers in an Amazonian ranching frontier
  90. LiDAR measurements of canopy structure predict spatial distribution of a tropical mature forest primate
  91. Hunting in Ancient and Modern Amazonia: Rethinking Sustainability
  92. Landscape-scale variation in structure and biomass of Amazonian seasonally flooded and unflooded forests
  93. The ‘few winners and many losers’ paradigm revisited: Emerging prospects for tropical forest biodiversity
  94. Pervasive Defaunation of Forest Remnants in a Tropical Biodiversity Hotspot
  95. Developing evidence-based arguments to assess the pristine nature of Amazonian forests
  96. Subsidized agricultural resettlements as drivers of tropical deforestation
  97. How pristine are tropical forests? An ecological perspective on the pre-Columbian human footprint in Amazonia and implications for contemporary conservation
  98. Cross-scale variation in the density and spatial distribution of an Amazonian non-timber forest resource
  99. Spatial, Temporal, and Economic Constraints to the Commercial Extraction of a Non–timber Forest Product: Copaíba (Copaifera spp.) Oleoresin in Amazonian Reserves
  100. Advantages of granivory in seasonal environments: feeding ecology of an arboreal seed predator in Amazonian forests
  101. Habitat Selection and Use of Space by Bald-Faced Sakis (Pithecia irrorata) in Southwestern Amazonia: Lessons from a Multiyear, Multigroup Study
  102. Consequences of actor level livelihood heterogeneity for additionality in a tropical forest payment for environmental services programme with an undifferentiated reward structure
  103. Habitat patch and matrix effects on small-mammal persistence in Amazonian forest fragments
  104. Determinants of livelihood strategy variation in two extractive reserves in Amazonian flooded and unflooded forests
  105. Amazonian countryside habitats provide limited avian conservation value
  106. Conservation in Sustainable-Use Tropical Forest Reserves
  107. Primary forests are irreplaceable for sustaining tropical biodiversity
  108. Fruit Removal and Natural Seed Dispersal of the Brazil Nut Tree (Bertholletia excelsa) in Central Amazonia, Brazil
  109. Spatial tools for modeling the sustainability of subsistence hunting in tropical forests
  110. Plant Defense Proteins That Inhibit Insect Peptidases
  111. The empty forest revisited
  112. Regional-scale heterogeneity in primate community structure at multiple undisturbed forest sites across south-eastern Peru
  113. Determinants of yield in a non-timber forest product: Copaifera oleoresin in Amazonian extractive reserves
  114. Usefulness of species range polygons for predicting local primate occurrences in southeastern Peru
  115. Large vertebrate responses to forest cover and hunting pressure in communal landholdings and protected areas of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico
  116. Mudanças no Código Florestal e seu impacto na ecologia e diversidade dos mamíferos no Brasil
  117. Effects of Pioneer Tree Species Hyperabundance on Forest Fragments in Northeastern Brazil
  118. Drivers of rural exodus from Amazonian headwaters
  119. A multi-region assessment of tropical forest biodiversity in a human-modified world
  120. Rural property size drives patterns of upland and riparian forest retention in a tropical deforestation frontier
  121. Prospects for biodiversity conservation in the Atlantic Forest: Lessons from aging human-modified landscapes
  122. Biodiversity conservation in human-modified Amazonian forest landscapes
  123. Using learning networks to understand complex systems: a case study of biological, geophysical and social research in the Amazon
  124. No Return from Biodiversity Loss
  125. Habitat patch size modulates terrestrial mammal activity patterns in Amazonian forest fragments
  126. Improving the design and management of forest strips in human-dominated tropical landscapes: a field test on Amazonian dung beetles
  127. Vertebrate population responses to reduced-impact logging in a neotropical forest
  128. A multi-taxa assessment of nestedness patterns across a multiple-use Amazonian forest landscape
  129. Long-term persistence of midsized to large-bodied mammals in Amazonian landscapes under varying contexts of forest cover
  130. Rural-urban migration brings conservation threats and opportunities to Amazonian watersheds
  131. Seed dispersal of the Brazil nut tree ( Bertholletia excelsa) by scatter-hoarding rodents in a central Amazonian forest
  132. Measuring the Conservation Value of Tropical Primary Forests: The Effect of Occasional Species on Estimates of Biodiversity Uniqueness
  133. Habitat and Life History Determinants of Antbird Occurrence in Variable-Sized Amazonian Forest Fragments
  134. Overexploitation
  135. The Potential for Species Conservation in Tropical Secondary Forests
  136. Vulnerability and Resilience of Tropical Forest Species to Land‐Use Change
  137. Hunting for Sustainability in Tropical Secondary Forests
  138. Game Vertebrate Densities in Hunted and Nonhunted Forest Sites in Manu National Park, Peru
  139. Allocation of hunting effort by Amazonian smallholders: Implications for conserving wildlife in mixed-use landscapes
  140. Modelling the long-term sustainability of indigenous hunting in Manu National Park, Peru: landscape-scale management implications for Amazonia
  141. Prospects for tropical forest biodiversity in a human-modified world
  142. Long-term erosion of tree reproductive trait diversity in edge-dominated Atlantic forest fragments
  143. Priority areas for the conservation of Atlantic forest large mammals
  144. Diversity and composition of Amazonian moths in primary, secondary and plantation forests
  145. Co-declining mammals and dung beetles: an impending ecological cascade
  146. Interspecific primate associations in Amazonian flooded and unflooded forests
  147. Gap-crossing movements predict species occupancy in Amazonian forest fragments
  148. Regional scale effects of human density and forest disturbance on large-bodied vertebrates throughout the Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico
  149. Habitat Quality of the Woolly Spider Monkey (Brachyteles hypoxanthus)
  150. Edge-effects Drive Tropical Forest Fragments Towards an Early-Successional System
  151. Emerging Threats to Tropical Forests William F. Laurance, Carlos A. Peres . Emerging Threats to Tropical Forests. 2006. The University of Chicago Press. Chicago. ISBN 0-226-47022-9 (soft cover), ISBN 0-226-47021-0 (hardcover). 563 p. $40.00 (soft cover...
  152. The value of forest strips for understorey birds in an Amazonian plantation landscape
  153. Deforestation dynamics in a fragmented region of southern Amazonia: evaluation and future scenarios
  154. Fire-mediated dieback and compositional cascade in an Amazonian forest
  155. Population abundance and biomass of large-bodied birds in Amazonian flooded and unflooded forests
  156. Avian life-history determinants of local extinction risk in a hyper-fragmented neotropical forest landscape
  157. Associations between primates and other mammals in a central Amazonian forest landscape
  158. Conservation Value of Remnant Riparian Forest Corridors of Varying Quality for Amazonian Birds and Mammals
  159. Terrestrial mammal responses to edges in Amazonian forest patches: a study based on track stations
  160. Drastic erosion in functional attributes of tree assemblages in Atlantic forest fragments of northeastern Brazil
  161. The cost-effectiveness of biodiversity surveys in tropical forests
  162. Quantifying the biodiversity value of tropical primary, secondary, and plantation forests
  163. Disturbance-Mediated Drift in Tree Functional Groups in Amazonian Forest Fragments
  164. Understanding the biodiversity consequences of habitat change: the value of secondary and plantation forests for neotropical dung beetles
  165. Large-vertebrate assemblages of primary and secondary forests in the Brazilian Amazon
  166. Diversity and composition of fruit-feeding butterflies in tropical Eucalyptus plantations
  167. Disturbance-Mediated Mammal Persistence and Abundance-Area Relationships in Amazonian Forest Fragments
  168. The value of primary, secondary and plantation forests for fruit-feeding butterflies in the Brazilian Amazon
  169. The Sustainability of Subsistence Hunting by Matsigenka Native Communities in Manu National Park, Peru
  170. William F. Laurance and Carlos Peres, Emerging Threats to Tropical Forests , University of Chicago Press (2006) ISBN 0226470229 pbk, 520 pp. Price $40.00/£25.50.
  171. Vertebrate responses to fruit production in Amazonian flooded and unflooded forests
  172. Paradox, presumption and pitfalls in conservation biology: The importance of habitat change for amphibians and reptiles
  173. Litter fall and decomposition in primary, secondary and plantation forests in the Brazilian Amazon
  174. Regional scale variation in forest structure and biomass in the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico: Effects of forest disturbance
  175. Rainforest renewed
  176. The Value of Primary, Secondary, and Plantation Forests for a Neotropical Herpetofauna
  177. Emerging Threats to Tropical Forests. William F. Laurance and Carlos A. Peres, editors.
  178. Hunting and Plant Community Dynamics in Tropical Forests: A Synthesis and Future Directions
  179. Basin-Wide Effects of Game Harvest on Vertebrate Population Densities in Amazonian Forests: Implications for Animal-Mediated Seed Dispersal
  180. The Plight of Large Animals in Tropical Forests and the Consequences for Plant Regeneration
  181. The value of primary, secondary and plantation forests for Amazonian birds
  182. Predicting the Uncertain Future of Tropical Forest Species in a Data Vacuum
  183. Diversity and composition of fruit-feeding butterflies in tropical Eucalyptus plantations
  184. Rapid avifaunal collapse along the Amazonian deforestation frontier
  185. Impact of game hunting by the Kayapó of south-eastern Amazonia: implications for wildlife conservation in tropical forest indigenous reserves
  186. Detecting anthropogenic disturbance in tropical forests
  187. Human-wildlife conflicts in a fragmented Amazonian forest landscape: determinants of large felid depredation on livestock
  188. Floristic, edaphic and structural characteristics of flooded and unflooded forests in the lower Rio Purús region of central Amazonia, Brazil
  189. The responses of understorey birds to forest fragmentation, logging and wildfires: An Amazonian synthesis
  190. Tree Phenology in Adjacent Amazonian Flooded and Unflooded Forests1
  191. Anthropogenic determinants of primate and carnivore local extinctions in a fragmented forest landscape of southern Amazonia
  192. Ecological responses of Amazonian forests to El Niño-induced surface fires
  193. Effects of Single and Recurrent Wildfires on Fruit Production and Large Vertebrate Abundance in a Central Amazonian Forest
  194. Why We Need Megareserves in Amazonia
  195. Population Density and Home Range Size of Red-Rumped Agoutis (Dasyprocta leporina) Within and Outside a Natural Brazil Nut Stand in Southeastern Amazonia1
  196. Mammal assemblage structure in Amazonian flooded and unflooded forests
  197. Primate assemblage structure in amazonian flooded and unflooded forests
  198. Primate Population Densities in Three Nutrient-Poor Amazonian Terra Firme Forests of South-Eastern Colombia
  199. AVIFAUNAL RESPONSES TO SINGLE AND RECURRENT WILDFIRES IN AMAZONIAN FORESTS
  200. Ecological responses to El Nino-induced surface fires in central Brazilian Amazonia: management implications for flammable tropical forests
  201. CORRECTIONS AND CLARIFICATIONS
  202. Demographic Threats to the Sustainability of Brazil Nut Exploitation
  203. Effects of surface fires on understorey insectivorous birds and terrestrial arthropods in central Brazilian Amazonia
  204. Elephants versus butterflies: the ecological role of large herbivores in the evolutionary history of two tropical worlds
  205. Surface wildfires in central Amazonia: short-term impact on forest structure and carbon loss
  206. Wild meat: the bigger picture
  207. Bringing home the biggest bacon: a cross-site analysis of the structure of hunter-kill profiles in Neotropical forests
  208. Evaluating non-user willingness to pay for a large-scale conservation programme in Amazonia: a UK/Italian contingent valuation study
  209. Morphological correlates of fire-induced tree mortality in a central Amazonian forest
  210. Extent of Nontimber Resource Extraction in Tropical Forests: Accessibility to Game Vertebrates by Hunters in the Amazon Basin
  211. Vertebrate responses to surface wildfires in a central Amazonian forest
  212. Large tree mortality and the decline of forest biomass following Amazonian wildfires
  213. Abiotic and vertebrate seed dispersal in the Brazilian Atlantic forest: implications for forest regeneration
  214. Effects of ground fires on understorey bird assemblages in Amazonian forests
  215. Bushmeat Exploitation in Tropical Forests: an Intercontinental Comparison
  216. Synergistic Effects of Subsistence Hunting and Habitat Fragmentation on Amazonian Forest Vertebrates
  217. Primate Conservation Biology Cometh of Age
  218. Primate Conservation Biology Cometh of Age
  219. Perils in Parks or Parks in Peril? Reconciling Conservation in Amazonian Reserves with and without Use
  220. Paving the way to the future of Amazonia
  221. Conservation and development alliances with the Kayapó of south-eastern Amazonia, a tropical forest indigenous people
  222. Primate conservation in the new millennium: The role of scientists
  223. Riverine barriers and the geographic distribution of Amazonian species
  224. Várzea: Diversity, Development, and Conservation of Amazonia's Whitewater Floodplains; C. Padoch, J.M. Ayres, M. Pinedo-Vasquez, A. Henderson (Eds.); Advances in Economic Botany, vol. 13; The New York Botanical Press, New York, 1999, 407 pages, ISBN 0-...
  225. Identifying keystone plant resources in tropical forests: the case of gums from Parkia pods
  226. Effects of Subsistence Hunting on Vertebrate Community Structure in Amazonian Forests
  227. Resource seasonality and the structure of mixed species bird flocks in a coastal Atlantic forest of southeastern Brazil
  228. Effects of habitat fragmentation on plant guild structure in the montane Atlantic forest of southeastern Brazil
  229. Ground fires as agents of mortality in a Central Amazonian forest
  230. Tropical forest disturbance and dynamics in Southeast Asia
  231. Rethinking tropical ecosystem management
  232. Book reviews
  233. USE OF MEDICINAL PLANTS AND BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION: A STABLE PARTNERSHIP?
  234. Seed dispersal, spatial distribution and population structure of Brazilnut trees ( Bertholletia excelsa) in southeastern Amazonia
  235. Primate community structure at twenty western Amazonian flooded and unflooded forests
  236. Effects of Habitat Quality and Hunting Pressure on Arboreal Folivore Densities in Neotropical Forests: A Case Study of Howler Monkeys (Alouatta spp.)
  237. Foraging ecology and use of space in wild golden lion tamarins (Leontopithecus rosalia)
  238. Foraging ecology and use of space in wild golden lion tamarins (Leontopithecus rosalia)
  239. Vertebrate predation of Brazil-nuts ( Bertholletia excelsa, Lecythidaceae), an agouti-dispersed Amazonian seed crop: a test of the escape hypothesis
  240. Conservation Biology in Theory and Practice.
  241. Food patch structure and plant resource partitioning in interspecific associations of amazonian tamarins
  242. Humid Tropical Environments.
  243. Use of Space, Spatial Group Structure, and Foraging Group Size of Gray Woolly Monkeys (Lagothrix lagotricha cana) at Urucu, Brazil
  244. Population status of white-lipped Tayassu pecari and collared peccaries T. tajacu in hunted and unhunted Amazonian forests
  245. A. B. Rylands (ed.). 1993. Marmosets and tamarins: systematics, behaviour, and ecology. Oxford Science Publications, Oxford, xv + 396 pages. ISBN 0-19-854022-1. Price £50.00 (hardback).
  246. Amazonian Nature Reserves: An Analysis of the Defensibility Status of Existing Conservation Units and Design Criteria for the Future
  247. Erratum to: Errata
  248. Composition, Density, and Fruiting Phenology of Arborescent Palms in an Amazonian Terra Firme Forest
  249. Marmosets and tamarins: systematics, behaviour, and ecology
  250. Indigenous Reserves and Nature Conservation in Amazonian Forests
  251. Diet and feeding ecology of gray woolly monkeys (lagothrix lagotricha cana) in Central Amazonia: Comparisons with other Atelines
  252. Exploring solutions for the tropical biodiversity crisis
  253. Which are the largest New World monkeys?
  254. Primate Responses to Phenological Changes in an Amazonian Terra Firme Forest
  255. How caimans protect fish stocks in western Brazilian Amazonia – a case for maintaining the ban on caiman hunting
  256. Structure and spatial organization of an Amazonian terra firme forest primate community
  257. Diet and feeding ecology of saddle-back (Saguinus fuscicollis) and moustached (S. mystax) tamarins in an Amazonianterra firmeforest
  258. Notes on the Primates of the Juruá River, Western Brazilian Amazonia
  259. Anti-Predation Benefits in a Mixed-Species Group of Amazonian Tamarins
  260. Notes on the ecology of buffy saki monkeys (Pithecia albicans, Gray 1860): A canopy seed-predator
  261. Prey-capture benefits in a mixed-species group of Amazonian tamarins, Saguinus fuscicollis and S. mystax
  262. Consequences of Joint-Territoriality in a Mixed-Species Group of Tamarin Monkeys
  263. Seed Predation of Cariniana micrantha (Lecythidaceae) by Brown Capuchin Monkeys in Central Amazonia
  264. Humboldt's woolly monkeys decimated by hunting in Amazonia
  265. Effects of hunting on western Amazonian primate communities
  266. Exudate-Eating by Wild Golden Lion Tamarins, Leontopithecus rosalia
  267. Costs and benefits of territorial defense in wild golden lion tamarins, Leontopithecus rosalia
  268. Effects of subsistence hunting and forest types on the structure of Amazonian primate communities
  269. Impacts of Subsistence Game Hunting on Amazonian Primates
  270. Impact of game hunting by the Kayapó of south-eastern Amazonia: implications for wildlife conservation in tropical forest indigenous reserves
  271. Species coexistence, distribution, and environmental determinants of neotropical primate richness: A community-level zoogeographic analysis