cris.boxmetadata.label.title
Responses of ungulates to seasonal inundations in the amazon floodplain
cris.boxmetadata.label.dateissued
01 browse.startsWith.months.january 1990
cris.boxmetadata.label.accesslevel
open access
cris.boxmetadata.label.resourcetype
journal article
cris.boxmetadata.label.authors
Universidad de Cambridge
cris.boxmetadata.label.abstract
. Terrestrial ungulates use different strategies to cope with widespread annual flooding of the Amazon basin. Red brocket deer (Mazama americana) and collared peccary (Tayassu tajacu) retreat to floodplain islands and shift from a frugivorous to a woody browse diet. However, both white-lipped peccary (Tayassu pecari) and lowland tapir (Tapirus terrestris) diets are unaffected by inundations; in the case of white-lipped peccary because they migrate into and out of flooded areas and in the case of lowland tapir because of their semi-aquatic nature. These-strategies of white-lipped peccary and lowland tapir enable them to exploit the greater fruit production of flooded forests more frequently than brocket deer and collared peccary. © 1990, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
cris.boxmetadata.label.citationstartpage
191
cris.boxmetadata.label.citationendpage
201
cris.boxmetadata.label.volume
6
cris.boxmetadata.label.issue
2
cris.boxmetadata.label.ocdeknowledgeArea
Meteorología y ciencias atmosféricas
cris.boxmetadata.label.doi
cris.boxmetadata.label.scopusidentifier
2-s2.0-0025208896
cris.boxmetadata.label.source
Journal of Tropical Ecology
cris.boxmetadata.label.partofresource
Journal of Tropical Ecology
cris.boxmetadata.label.containerissn
02664674
cris.boxmetadata.label.containerdoi
10.1007/BF00378967
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