Artículos científicos publicados

  1. Datos sobre la ocurrencia de la nutria de río Lontra Longicaudis Olfers, 1818 en la Reserva De Biosfera Del Manu – Link
  2. Variación de la diversidad de mamíferos en un gradiente de tres niveles de conservación separados por barreras geográficas dentro de la Reserva de Biosfera del Manu. –Link
  3. Diversidad de avispas en un gradiente de perturbación de los ecosistemas de la Reserva de la Biósfera del Manu (Perú): Su valor bioindicador – Link
  4. Contribución al conocimiento de la subfamilia Polistinae (Hymenoptera: Vespidae) en la Reserva de la Biosfera del Manu, Madre de Dios, Perú – Link
  5. Nuevos registros de las subfamilias Ceropalinae y Notocyphinae (Hymenoptera: Pompilidae) de la estación biológica “Manu Learning Centre”, Perú – Link
  6. Indigenous Lands are Better for Amphibian Biodiversity Conservation Than Immigrant-Managed Agricultural Lands: A Case Study From Manu Biosphere Reserve, Peru – Link
  7. Altitudinal differences in alpha, beta and functional diversity of an amphibian community in a biodiversity hotspot – Link
  8. Predation of Scinax ruber (Anura: Hylidae) tadpoles by a fishing spider of the genus Thaumisia (Araneae: Pisauridae) in south-east Peru – Link
  9. Human disturbance impacts on rainforest mammals are most notable in the canopy, especially for larger-bodied species – Link
  10. Are We Using the Most Appropriate Methodologies to Assess the Sensitivity of Rainforest Biodiversity to Habitat Disturbance? – Link
  11. Food for thought. Rainforest carrion-feeding butterflies are more sensitive indicators of disturbance history than fruit feeders – Link
  12. A new species of poison-dart frog (Anura: Dendrobatidae) from Manu province, Amazon region of southeastern Peru, with notes on its natural history, bioacoustics, phylogenetics, and recommended conservation status – Link
  13. Methods matter: Different biodiversity survey methodologies identify contrasting biodiversity patterns in a human modified rainforest — A case study with amphibians – Link
  14. Out on a Limb: Arboreal Camera Traps as an Emerging Methodology for Inventorying Elusive Rainforest Mammals – Link
  15. How Much Potential Biodiversity and Conservation Value Can a Regenerating Rainforest Provide? A ‘Best-Case Scenario’ Approach from the Peruvian Amazon – Link
  16. Past Human Disturbance Effects upon Biodiversity are Greatest in the Canopy; A Case Study on Rainforest Butterflies – Link