
Published online:
22 March 2012
Published in print:
02 January 2006
Online ISBN:
9780520916098
Print ISBN:
9780520098534
Contents
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Materials and Methods Materials and Methods
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Study Sites and Sampling Design Study Sites and Sampling Design
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Small Mammal Trapping Small Mammal Trapping
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Habitat Variables Habitat Variables
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Data Analyses Data Analyses
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Results Results
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Multivariate Patterns of Variation Multivariate Patterns of Variation
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Species Abundances According to Trap Stratum, Forest Type, Region, and River Bank Species Abundances According to Trap Stratum, Forest Type, Region, and River Bank
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Alpha diversity Alpha diversity
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Gamma Diversity Gamma Diversity
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Discussion Discussion
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Acknowledgements Acknowledgements
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Literature Cited Literature Cited
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Appendix 1. Percent capture success of small mammal species along the Rio Juruá, summarized according to forest type, region, and river bank. Values represent the sum of terrestrial percent capture success (per 100 station nights) and canopy percent capture success (per 100 station nights). Trap effort is detailed in Table . Appendix 1. Percent capture success of small mammal species along the Rio Juruá, summarized according to forest type, region, and river bank. Values represent the sum of terrestrial percent capture success (per 100 station nights) and canopy percent capture success (per 100 station nights). Trap effort is detailed in Table .
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Chapter
Small Mammal Communities in Upland and Floodplain Forests along an Amazonian White Water River
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Pages
334–380
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Published:January 2006
Cite
Malcolm, Jay R., James L. Patton, and Maria Nazareth F. da Silva, 'Small Mammal Communities in Upland and Floodplain Forests along an Amazonian White Water River', in Eileen Lacey (ed.), Mammalian Diversification: From Chromosomes to Phylogeography (Oakland, CA , 2006; online edn, California Scholarship Online, 22 Mar. 2012), https://doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520098534.003.0011, accessed 15 May 2025.
Abstract
This chapter examines the non-volant small mammal communities in floodplain and upland forest along the Juruá River, a white-water tributary in the western part of the Amazon Basin. It compares small mammal community composition and abundance and richness between upland and floodplain forests, and analyzes the correlations between small mammal community structure and various measurements of forest physiognomy. The chapter suggests that the Jutaí Arch of the river may have served as a barrier separating small mammal populations in the former upstream and downstream subsidence basins.
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