Home Species richness and distribution of Neotropical rodents, with conservation implications
Article Publicly Available

Species richness and distribution of Neotropical rodents, with conservation implications

  • Giovanni Amori EMAIL logo , Federica Chiozza , Bruce D. Patterson , Carlo Rondinini , Jan Schipper and Luca Luiselli
Published/Copyright: August 23, 2012

Received: 2012-4-3
Accepted: 2012-7-17
Published Online: 2012-08-23
Published in Print: 2013-02-01

©2013 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Masthead
  2. Masthead
  3. Original Studies
  4. Species richness and distribution of Neotropical rodents, with conservation implications
  5. Demographics, diet, movements, and survival of an isolated, unmanaged raccoon Procyon lotor (Procyonidae, Carnivora) population on the Outer Banks of North Carolina
  6. Distribution and population status of Przewalski’s gazelle, Procapra przewalskii (Cetartiodactyla, Bovidae)
  7. Mediterranean monk seal Monachus monachus distribution and fisheries interactions in the Atlantic Sahara during the second half of the 20th century
  8. Phenotypic changes and small mammal impoverishment on a Brazilian Atlantic Forest Island
  9. A methodological analysis of behavioural observation in social African mole rats (Bathyergidae, Rodentia)
  10. Resource partitioning in three syntopic forest-dwelling European bat species (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae)
  11. Sexual size dimorphism and testis size allometry in tuco-tucos (Rodentia: Ctenomyidae)
  12. Molecular phylogeny of the Iranian Plateau five-toed jerboa, Allactaga (Dipodidea: Rodentia), inferred from mtDNA
  13. Short Notes
  14. Molecular variation and chromosomal stability within Gerbillus nanus (Rodentia, Gerbillinae): taxonomic and biogeographic implications
  15. Association of the southern Amazon red squirrel Urosciurus spadiceus Olfers, 1818 with mixed-species bird flocks
  16. New distributional records for bats of the Argentine Patagonia and the southernmost known record for a molossid bat in the world
  17. The first historical record of a rhinoceros in Togo
Downloaded on 26.10.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/mammalia-2012-0050/html
Scroll to top button