M
Marina Anciães
Researcher at National Institute of Amazonian Research
Publications - 39
Citations - 736
Marina Anciães is an academic researcher from National Institute of Amazonian Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Manakin & Biological dispersal. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 34 publications receiving 592 citations. Previous affiliations of Marina Anciães include American Museum of Natural History & Federal University of Bahia.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Disentangling the drivers of reduced long-distance seed dispersal by birds in an experimentally fragmented landscape
María Uriarte,Marina Anciães,Marina Anciães,Mariana T. B. da Silva,Paulo Rubim,Erik I. Johnson,Emilio M. Bruna +6 more
TL;DR: The importance of foraging style for seed dispersal is emphasized and the primacy of habitat size relative to spatial configuration in preserving biotic interactions is highlighted.
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The effects of fragmentation on fluctuating asymmetry in passerine birds of Brazilian tropical forests
TL;DR: It is suggested that FA is a useful tool to assess the effects of fragmentation on forest birds, and may be applied in monitoring neotropical birds.
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Effects of forest fragmentation on the seedling recruitment of a tropical herb: assessing seed vs. safe-site limitation
TL;DR: Overall, safe-site limitation was the most important constraint on seedling establishment, and the effects of fragmentation on abiotic processes may be more important than the disruption of biotic interactions in driving biodiversity loss in tropical forests, at least for some functional groups.
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Climate change effects on Neotropical manakin diversity based on ecological niche modeling
TL;DR: Predicted changes in potential distributions, spatial configuration of suitable habitats, and geographical position of species ranges were more dramatic for species inhabiting flatlands than for montane species.
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An inverse latitudinal gradient in infection probability and phylogenetic diversity for Leucocytozoon blood parasites in New World birds.
Alan Fecchio,Jeffrey A. Bell,Mariane Bosholn,Jefferson A. Vaughan,Vasyl V. Tkach,Holly L. Lutz,Holly L. Lutz,Víctor R. Cueto,Cristian A. Gorosito,Daniel González-Acuña,Chad Stromlund,Danielle Kay Kvasager,Kiba J. M. Comiche,Karin Kirchgatter,João Batista de Pinho,Jacob S. Berv,Marina Anciães,Carla Suertegaray Fontana,Kristof Zyskowski,Sidnei Sampaio,Janice H. Dispoto,Spencer C. Galen,Jason D. Weckstein,Jason D. Weckstein,Nicholas J. Clark +24 more
TL;DR: The results show that integrating host traits, host ancestry, bioclimatic data, and microhabitat characteristics that are important for vector reproduction are imperative to understand and predict infection prevalence and diversity of vector-transmitted parasites.