Notes on Residency, Home Range, and Natural History of the ‘Vulnerable’ Cinereous Warbling-Finch, Poospiza cinerea
- L. M. Costa, M. Rodrigues
- Environmental Science
- 19 June 2013
The Cinereous Warbling-Finch showed year-round residency and long-term site fidelity for at least 3.5 years, thus contradicting the nomadism hypothesis.
Avifauna, Alto do Palácio, Serra do Cipó National Park, state of Minas Gerais, southeastern Brazil
- M. Rodrigues, Guilherme H. S. Freitas, L. M. Costa, D. Dias, M. Varela, Licléia C. Rodrigues
- Environmental Science
- 1 March 2011
The results corroborate that the campos rupestres of the Espinhaco range are not only associated with the Cerrado biome, but harbor species associated with both surrounding biomes (Cerrado and Atlantic Forest) and to the mountaintops of southeastern Brazil, supporting the uniqueness of this vegetation type.
Breeding biology of the Cipo Cinclodes Cinclodes espinhacensis, a micro-endemic furnariid of the southeastern Brazilian mountains
- L. M. Costa, Guilherme H. S. Freitas, P. E. M. P. Silva, L. C. Ribeiro, M. F. Vasconcelos, M. Rodrigues
- BiologyRevista Brasileira de Ornitologia
- 1 June 2019
It is demonstrated that the nesting habits of Cipo Cinclodes agree with those reported for other species of the genus, although some details differ from what is known for the closely related species, the Long-tailed CInclodes CinClodes pabsti.
DESCRIPTION OF AN AMAZING NEST OF CAATINGA CACHALOTE Pseudoseisura cristata INFESTED BY Psammolestes tertius IN TAUA, STATE OF CEARA, NORTHEASTERN BRAZIL
- L. Diotaiuti, C. Bezerra, Cyro José Soares, L. M. Costa, S. E. Barbosa
- Biology
- 25 June 2018
The amazing infestation of a nest of Pseudoseisura cristata in the municipality of Taua, Ceará is described, with a colony with about 40 specimens of P. tertius in all evolutionary stages, all negative for trypanosomatids.
A new species of Cinclodes from the Espinhaço Range, southeastern Brazil: insights into the biogeographical history of the South American highlands
- Guilherme H. S. Freitas, A. V. Chaves, L. M. Costa, F. R. Santos, M. Rodrigues
- Biology
- 1 October 2012
The new species discovered at high elevation in the southern portion of the Espinhaco Range, in the state of Minas Gerais, southeastern Brazil is described and it is suggested it meets the criteria of the IUCN Red List category of Endangered.
Spatial ecology and conservation of the microendemic ovenbird Cipo Cinclodes (Cinclodes espinhacensis) from the Brazilian highlands
- Guilherme H. S. Freitas, L. M. Costa, P. E. M. P. Silva, A. V. Chaves, L. Ribeiro, M. Rodrigues
- BiologyJournal of field ornithology
- 1 June 2019
Bird community structure and dynamics in the campos rupestres of southern Espinhaço Range, Brazil: diversity, phenology and conservation
- M. Rodrigues, L. M. Costa
- Environmental Science
- 8 November 2013
Bird community structure and dynamics in the campos rupestres of southern Espinhaco Range, Brazil: diversity, phenology and conservation.
Architecture, composition and placement of nests of the Cipo Canastero Asthenes luizae (Aves: Furnariidae), a bird endemic to Brazilian mountaintops
- L. M. Costa, Guilherme H. S. Freitas, M. Rodrigues
- Environmental ScienceJournal of Natural History
- 24 February 2019
ABSTRACT Cipo Canastero (Asthenes luizae) is a bird endemic to Brazilian mountaintops, inhabiting rock outcrop habitats of the campos rupestres in the southern Espinhaço Range. Available data about…
Adopting habitat-use to infer movement potential and sensitivity to human disturbance of birds in a Neotropical Savannah
- Nadinni Oliveira de Matos Sousa, L. Lopes, M. Marini
- Environmental Science
- 1 February 2021
Neotropical ornithology: Reckoning with historical assumptions, removing systemic barriers, and reimagining the future
- Letícia Soares, Kristina L. Cockle, Pedro Vitor Ribeiro Martins
- BiologyOrnithological Applications
- 7 February 2023
It is argued that future advances in Neotropical ornithology will critically depend on identifying and addressing the systemic barriers that hold back ornithologists who live and work in the Neotropics: unreliable and limited funding, exclusion from international research leadership, restricted dissemination of knowledge, and logistical barriers.
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