Book Chapter
Potential Keystone Plant Species for the Frugivore Community at Tinigua Park, Colombia
Pablo Stevenson
2005, Tropical Fruits and Frugivores, Pages 37-57
Book Chapter
Keystone Fruit Resources and Australia’s Tropical Rain Forests
David Westcott, Matt Bradford, Andrew Dennis and Geoff Lipsett-Moore
2005, Tropical Fruits and Frugivores, Pages 237-260
Book Chapter
The Frugivore Community and the Fruiting Plant Flora in a New Guinea Rainforest: Identifying Keystone Frugivores
Andrew L. Mack and Debra D. Wright
2005, Tropical Fruits and Frugivores, Pages 185-203
Book Chapter
Prioritizing Symbiosis to Sustain Biodiversity: Are Symbionts Keystone Species?
Douglas Zook
Cellular Origin, Life in Extreme Habitats and Astrobiology, 2006, Volume 4, Symbiosis, I, Pages 3-12
Book Chapter
Tropical Dry Climates
Arturo Sanchez-Azofeifa, Margaret E. Kalacska, Mauricio Quesada, Kathryn E. Stoner and Jorge A. Lobo, et al.
Tasks for vegetation science 34, 1, Volume 39, Phenology: An Integrative Environmental Science, Part 3, Pages 121-137
Book Chapter
Ecosystem decay of Amazonian forest fragments: implications for conservation
William F. Laurance
Environmental Science and Engineering, 2007, Stability of Tropical Rainforest Margins, Part 2, Pages 9-35
Journal Article
Tourism and flagship species in conservation
Matthew J. Walpole and Nigel Leader-Williams
Biodiversity and Conservation, 2002, Volume 11, Number 3, Pages 543-547
Journal Article
Tropical rainforests as dynamic symbiospheres of life
Douglas Zook
Symbiosis, 2010, Volume 51, Number 1, Pages 27-36
Book Chapter
The Key to Madagascar Frugivores
Patricia C. Wright, Vololontiana R. Razafindratsita, Sharon T. Pochron and Jukka Jernvall
2005, Tropical Fruits and Frugivores, Pages 121-138
Book Chapter
Ecological Biogeography of Primates in Guyana
S. M. Lehman, R. W. Sussman, J. Phillips-Conroy and W. Prince
Developments in Primatology: Progress and Prospects, 2006, Primate Biogeography, Part 2, Pages 105-130