2001
DOI: 10.1046/j.1523-1739.2001.00170.x
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Effects of Roads on Movements by Understory Birds in Mixed-Species Flocks in Central Amazonian Brazil

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Cited by 177 publications
(148 citation statements)
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“…However, the marginally significant differences between the distance of T. caerulescens territories to the road, and the average increase in the distances from territory centers to the road for the three species in the reproductive season, suggest some adverse effects of the road that were not detected here. In another study of the road effects on understory mixed-species flocks in the Amazon, three of five flocks were restricted to just one side of the road, but two other flocks had territories that spanned the roads (DEVELEY & STOUFFER 2001). In the same study, the authors reported that the roads (without canopy liking the two sides) formed territorial limits for the five flocks living in the area.…”
Section: 3mentioning
confidence: 93%
“…However, the marginally significant differences between the distance of T. caerulescens territories to the road, and the average increase in the distances from territory centers to the road for the three species in the reproductive season, suggest some adverse effects of the road that were not detected here. In another study of the road effects on understory mixed-species flocks in the Amazon, three of five flocks were restricted to just one side of the road, but two other flocks had territories that spanned the roads (DEVELEY & STOUFFER 2001). In the same study, the authors reported that the roads (without canopy liking the two sides) formed territorial limits for the five flocks living in the area.…”
Section: 3mentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Any cleared surface larger than a forest gap is a radically contrasting landscape feature likely to limit the movement of animals (15). This often results in well isolated forest fragments, where recolonization is too slow to compensate for local extinction on a management time scale.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…No entanto, devido ao tempo de latência, muitas das espécies mantiveram-se na paisagem mesmo com a posterior redução do tamanho dos fragmentos e do aumento do grau de isolamento. (Develey & Stouffer, 2001;Uezu et al, 2005). Em um grau de isolamento intermediário, algumas migrações poderiam até aumentar a chance de permanência das espécies nos fragmentos e, por isso, gerar um tempo de latência maior (Hanski & Ovaskainen, 2002).…”
Section: O Limiar Da Fragmentação E O Tempo De Latênciaunclassified