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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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The road less traveled: Phylogenetic perspectives in primatology

TL;DR: The predominant framework for behavioral studies of primates over the last three decades has been socioecological, but there are many reasons to think that research in primatology could be profitably supplemented by a phylogenetic perspective.
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Isolation, characterization and evaluation of 11 autosomal STRs suitable for population studies in black and gold howler monkeys Alouatta caraya

TL;DR: These markers provide an exclusion power of 0.922 when neither parent is known and are suitable for parentage analysis, population genetics and phylogeographical studies of A. caraya, the southernmost primate in the New World.
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Social and genetic factors mediating male participation in collective group defence in black howler monkeys

TL;DR: Findings suggest that cooperative group defence in male black howler monkeys evolved principally through mutualism in which participants gain direct fitness benefits.
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Duetting Patterns of Titi Monkeys (Primates, Pitheciidae: Callicebinae) and Relationships with Phylogeny.

TL;DR: An acoustic analysis of callicebine loud calls recorded from ten species of titis at sites in Bolivia, Peru, and Ecuador found four distinct patterns of duetting that only partially match three major clades identified in recent molecular genetic studies, and reveals a presumptive taxonomic incoherence illustrated by the distinctive loud calls of the San Martin titi monkey.