We document patterns of fruit and vertebrate abundance within an extensive, virtually undisturbed mosaic of seasonally flooded (várzea and igapó) and unflooded (terra firme) forests of central Amazonia. Using phenological surveys and a standardised series of line-transect censuses we investigate the spatial and temporal patterns of immature and mature fruit availability and how this may affect patterns of habitat use by vertebrates in the landscape. All habitats showed marked peaks in fruiting activity, and vertebrate detection rates varied over time for most species both within and between forest types. Many arboreal and terrestrial vertebrates used both types of flooded forest on a seasonal basis, and fluctuations in the abundance of terr...
Few studies have contrasted faunal communities between flooded and unflooded tropical forests, and s...
The flood pulse is the main factor structuring and differentiating the ecological communities of Ama...
Habitat loss and fragmentation are global conservation concerns, but animal species do not respond t...
Terrestrial vertebrate frugivores constitute one of the major guilds in tropical forests. Previous s...
Few attempts have been made to understand how spatiotemporal changes in fruit supply influence frugi...
Several forest types compose the apparently homogenous forest landscape of the lowland Amazon. The s...
Constructing community fruit–frugivore networks has proved challenging in tropical forests to date, ...
Várzea forests account for 17% of the Amazon basin and endure an annual inundation that can reach 14...
There is considerable variation in primate species richness across neotropical forest sites, and the...
In Amazonian igapó forests (seasonally flooded forests on blackwater river margins), the end of the ...
The responses of saddleback tamarins Saguinus fuscicollis avilapiresi, moustached tamarins S. mystax...
In Amazonian igapó forests (seasonally flooded forests on blackwater river margins), the end of the ...
<div><p>Várzea forests account for 17% of the Amazon basin and endure an annual inundation that can ...
In chapter 1, I investigate the role of heterogeneous landscapes and its effects on the population s...
Few studies have contrasted faunal communities between flooded and unflooded tropical forests, and s...
Few studies have contrasted faunal communities between flooded and unflooded tropical forests, and s...
The flood pulse is the main factor structuring and differentiating the ecological communities of Ama...
Habitat loss and fragmentation are global conservation concerns, but animal species do not respond t...
Terrestrial vertebrate frugivores constitute one of the major guilds in tropical forests. Previous s...
Few attempts have been made to understand how spatiotemporal changes in fruit supply influence frugi...
Several forest types compose the apparently homogenous forest landscape of the lowland Amazon. The s...
Constructing community fruit–frugivore networks has proved challenging in tropical forests to date, ...
Várzea forests account for 17% of the Amazon basin and endure an annual inundation that can reach 14...
There is considerable variation in primate species richness across neotropical forest sites, and the...
In Amazonian igapó forests (seasonally flooded forests on blackwater river margins), the end of the ...
The responses of saddleback tamarins Saguinus fuscicollis avilapiresi, moustached tamarins S. mystax...
In Amazonian igapó forests (seasonally flooded forests on blackwater river margins), the end of the ...
<div><p>Várzea forests account for 17% of the Amazon basin and endure an annual inundation that can ...
In chapter 1, I investigate the role of heterogeneous landscapes and its effects on the population s...
Few studies have contrasted faunal communities between flooded and unflooded tropical forests, and s...
Few studies have contrasted faunal communities between flooded and unflooded tropical forests, and s...
The flood pulse is the main factor structuring and differentiating the ecological communities of Ama...
Habitat loss and fragmentation are global conservation concerns, but animal species do not respond t...