Proposed mechanisms for the decline of terrestrial and understory insectivorous birds in the tropics include a related subset that together has been termed the “microclimate hypothesis.” One prediction from this hypothesis is that sensitivity to bright light environments discourages birds of the dimly lit rainforest interior from using edges, gaps, or disturbed forest. Using a hierarchical Bayesian framework and capture data across time and space, we tested this by first determining vulnerability based on differences in within-species capture rates between disturbed and undisturbed forest for 64 bird species at the Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project in central Amazonian Brazil. We found that 35 species (55%) were vulnerable to ...
Ecogeographic rules provide a framework within which to test evolutionary hypotheses of adaptation. ...
Camera traps have become an increasingly useful tool for biodiversity surveys in tropical forests, b...
Forest fragmentation may negatively affect populations typically found within continuous forest trac...
Proposed mechanisms for the decline of terrestrial and understory insectivorous birds in the tropics...
Proposed mechanisms for the decline of terrestrial and understory insectivorous birds in the tropics...
Proposed mechanisms for the decline of terrestrial and understory insectivorous birds in the tropics...
roposed mechanisms for the decline of terrestrial and understory insectivorous birds in the tropics ...
Neotropical forests contain the core of global avian diversity. Of these, the Amazon rainforest is t...
Insectivores of the tropical rainforest floor are consistently among the most vulnerable birds to fo...
Rainforest loss threatens terrestrial insectivorous birds throughout the world's tropics. Recent evi...
Twenty percent of the Brazilian Amazon has now been deforested, and deforestation rates are increasi...
Aim: We evaluated the influence of climate in determining bird communities along precipitation gradi...
Primary tropical rain forests are being rapidly perforated with new edges via roads, logging, and pa...
Ecogeographic rules provide a framework within which to test evolutionary hypotheses of adaptation. ...
Camera traps have become an increasingly useful tool for biodiversity surveys in tropical forests, b...
Ecogeographic rules provide a framework within which to test evolutionary hypotheses of adaptation. ...
Camera traps have become an increasingly useful tool for biodiversity surveys in tropical forests, b...
Forest fragmentation may negatively affect populations typically found within continuous forest trac...
Proposed mechanisms for the decline of terrestrial and understory insectivorous birds in the tropics...
Proposed mechanisms for the decline of terrestrial and understory insectivorous birds in the tropics...
Proposed mechanisms for the decline of terrestrial and understory insectivorous birds in the tropics...
roposed mechanisms for the decline of terrestrial and understory insectivorous birds in the tropics ...
Neotropical forests contain the core of global avian diversity. Of these, the Amazon rainforest is t...
Insectivores of the tropical rainforest floor are consistently among the most vulnerable birds to fo...
Rainforest loss threatens terrestrial insectivorous birds throughout the world's tropics. Recent evi...
Twenty percent of the Brazilian Amazon has now been deforested, and deforestation rates are increasi...
Aim: We evaluated the influence of climate in determining bird communities along precipitation gradi...
Primary tropical rain forests are being rapidly perforated with new edges via roads, logging, and pa...
Ecogeographic rules provide a framework within which to test evolutionary hypotheses of adaptation. ...
Camera traps have become an increasingly useful tool for biodiversity surveys in tropical forests, b...
Ecogeographic rules provide a framework within which to test evolutionary hypotheses of adaptation. ...
Camera traps have become an increasingly useful tool for biodiversity surveys in tropical forests, b...
Forest fragmentation may negatively affect populations typically found within continuous forest trac...