2015
DOI: 10.1896/052.029.0102
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The Distribution and Taxonomy of Titi Monkeys (Callicebus) in Central and Southern Peru, with the Description of a New Species

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Cited by 18 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…In addition, monophyly across the hypothesised range for most species has yet to be explicitly tested. Four new species have been formally described since 2010 (as well as one resurrected taxon; Defler, Bueno, & García, ; Gualda‐Barros, Nascimento, & Amaral, ; Dalponte, Silva, & Silva‐Júnior, ; Vermeer & Tello‐Alvarado, ), and given the many uncertainties/unknowns, further changes to the species‐level taxonomy of each of the callicebine genera are likely. New species descriptions and/or modifications to hypothesised species’ distributions may impact how accurately callicebine taxa are represented in our biogeographic analyses.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In addition, monophyly across the hypothesised range for most species has yet to be explicitly tested. Four new species have been formally described since 2010 (as well as one resurrected taxon; Defler, Bueno, & García, ; Gualda‐Barros, Nascimento, & Amaral, ; Dalponte, Silva, & Silva‐Júnior, ; Vermeer & Tello‐Alvarado, ), and given the many uncertainties/unknowns, further changes to the species‐level taxonomy of each of the callicebine genera are likely. New species descriptions and/or modifications to hypothesised species’ distributions may impact how accurately callicebine taxa are represented in our biogeographic analyses.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Species divergences within the Western clade were largely characterised by “island hopping” between Inambari and Napo across the Rio Solimões‐Amazonas, although jump dispersal back across the upper Rio Madeira to southern Rondônia led to the divergence of P. brunneus (Figure d). Further details about the exact dispersal patterns should be interpreted with caution given the important taxa missing from this clade in this study, such as P. toppini , P. aureipalatii and potentially P. urubambensis (see Vermeer & Tello‐Alvarado, ), as well as the availability of only mitochondrial data for some species for phylogenetic inference (see Supporting Information Table S1 in Appendix ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Our new records for Peru add one more genus and three species to the country reaching to 541 mammal species in Peru (Pacheco et al, 2009;Lim et al, 2010;Velazco et al, 2010aVelazco et al, , 2010bGregorin & Almeida, 2010;Gutiérrez et al, 2010;Mantilla-Meluk & Baker, 2010;Díaz, 2011;Velazco & Cadenillas, 2011;Hice & Velazco, 2012;Larsen et al, 2012;Medina et al, 2012;Jiménez et al, 2013;Marsh, 2014;Medina et al, 2014;Pacheco et al, 2014;Rengifo et al, 2014;Velazco et al, 2014;Zeballos et al, 2014;Patton et al, 2015;Hurtado & Pacheco, 2015;Vermeer & Tello-Alvarado, 2015). That show the importance of conduced Flora and Fauna Monitoring Programs for knowing better the diversity of Peruvian mammals in Peru as a whole and in Pampas del Heath in particular.…”
Section: Distributionmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…biol. 23(3): 315 -320 (Diciembre 2016) La diversidad de mamíferos del Perú se estima en alrededor de 548 especies nativas , Lim et al 2010, Velazco et al 2010a, 2010b, Gregorin & Almeida 2010, Mantilla-Meluk & Baker 2010, Díaz 2011, Matauschek et al 2011, Velazco & Cadenillas 2011, Calderón & Pacheco 2012, Hice & Velazco 2012, Larsen et al 2012, Medina et al 2012, Jiménez et al 2013, Velazco et al 2014, Marsh 2014, Medina et al 2014, Rengifo & Pacheco 2014, De Vivo & Carmignotto 2015, De Oliveira & Gonçalves 2015, Tribe 2015, Hurtado & Pacheco 2015, Vermeer & Tello-Alvarado 2015, Medina et al 2016, Nascimento et al 2016, Jiménez & Pacheco 2016, constituida principalmente por murciélagos (32.66%) y roedores (32.12%). Dichos grupos de mamíferos influyen directa e indirectamente en la estructura, composición y dinámica de los ecosistemas, a través de procesos naturales tales como: polinización, dispersión y predación de semillas, dispersión de micorrizas, insectivoría y como alimento para predadores (Emmons & Feer 1999).…”
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