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Leandro Talione Sabagh

Researcher at Rio de Janeiro State University

Publications -  11
Citations -  144

Leandro Talione Sabagh is an academic researcher from Rio de Janeiro State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Scinax & Leptodactylidae. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 9 publications receiving 122 citations. Previous affiliations of Leandro Talione Sabagh include Universidade Federal do Estado do Rio de Janeiro.

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News records of phoresy and hyperphoresy among treefrogs, ostracods, and ciliates in bromeliad of Atlantic forest

TL;DR: The bromeliad habitat contributes to a high biodiversity and three treefrog species are recorded as new phoretic agents of ostracods, and a first case of hyperphoresy among treefrogs, ostracod and ciliates is recorded.
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Host bromeliads and their associated frog species: Further considerations on the importance of species interactions for conservation

TL;DR: This work gathered published plus fieldwork data on the frog-bromeliad mutualism and compiled a checklist of 99 bromeligenous frogs species associated to 69 b romeliad hosts, and found threatened bromeliads hosting non-threatened frogs.
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Diet of the toad Rhinella icterica (Anura: Bufonidae) from Atlantic Forest Highlands of southeastern Brazil

TL;DR: It is concluded that R. icterica toads at the highlands of Itatiaia feeds on arthropods, mainly ants and coleopterans and that the high consumption of preys with relatively small and similar size as ants in the diet prevents an expected relationship among frog body or mouth size and prey volume and size.
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Living together, sometimes feeding in a similar way: the case of the syntopic hylid frogs Hypsiboas raniceps and Scinax acuminatus (Anura: Hylidae) in the Pantanal of Miranda, Mato Grosso do Sul State, Brazil

TL;DR: The feeding ecology of two Hylinae anurans, living sympatrically and syntopically in the Pantanal of Miranda, Mato Grosso do Sul State, Brazil, is studied, suggesting that these two frog species, despite sharing similar microhabitat and period of activity, tends to differ somewhat in diet.
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Larval Diet in Bromeliad Pools: A Case Study of Tadpoles of Two Species in the Genus Scinax (Hylidae)

TL;DR: The data suggest that tadpoles of S. perpusillus are, in general, non-selective omnivores feeding on items in a similar proportion to their occurrence in the environment, while tadPoles ofS.