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Anthony Di Fiore
Researcher at University of Texas at Austin
Publications - 164
Citations - 13875
Anthony Di Fiore is an academic researcher from University of Texas at Austin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Animal ecology. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 155 publications receiving 11656 citations. Previous affiliations of Anthony Di Fiore include Universidad San Francisco de Quito & National Museum of Natural History.
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Adult male replacement and subsequent infant care by male and siblings in socially monogamous owl monkeys (Aotus azarai).
TL;DR: This work describes changes in infant care patterns that took place after the eviction of the resident male by a solitary male in an owl monkey population in the Argentinean Chaco and reports of care by sibling and by non-putative fathers in wild owl monkeys.
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Social monogamy, male-female relationships, and biparental care in wild titi monkeys (Callicebus discolor).
TL;DR: The data suggest that the pair may experience social costs during times of intense infant care but that any putative energetic costs associated with infant care are not mitigated by adjusting physical activity.
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Behavior, Ecology, and Demography of Aotus vociferans in Yasuní National Park, Ecuador
TL;DR: A comparison of tropical owl monkeys with more temperate Aotus azarai from the Argentinean Gran Chaco reveals that grouping patterns, day range length, and territory size are relatively conserved across the genus despite dramatic differences in body size and activity pattern.
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Capuchin monkey biogeography : understanding Sapajus Pleistocene range expansion and the current sympatry between Cebus and Sapajus
Marcela Guimarães Moreira Lima,Marcela Guimarães Moreira Lima,Janet C. Buckner,José de Sousa e Silva-Júnior,Alexandre Aleixo,Amely B. Martins,Jean P. Boubli,Andrés Link,Izeni Pires Farias,Maria Nazareth Ferreira da Silva,Fabio Rohe,Fabio Rohe,Helder Lima de Queiroz,Kenneth L Chiou,Anthony Di Fiore,Michael E. Alfaro,Jessica W. Lynch Alfaro +16 more
TL;DR: The biogeographical history of the clade is reconstructed using statistical methods that model lineages’ occupation of different regions over time in order to evaluate recently proposed ‘Out of Amazonia’ and ‘Reinvasion of Amazonian’ hypotheses as alternative explanations for the extensive geographical overlap.
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Revisiting the phylogenetic relationships, biogeography, and taxonomy of spider monkeys (genus Ateles) in light of new molecular data
TL;DR: A Bayesian dating analysis suggests that the most recent common ancestor of extant Ateles dates to ∼6.7 Ma, and most species-level splits within the genus took place in the late Pliocene, suggesting that the modern diversity in spider monkeys cannot be explained principally by isolation and divergence of populations in forest refugia during the Pleistocene.