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- American Museum Novitates
- A Safe Place for Amphibians? a Cautionary Tale on the Taxonomy and Conservation of Frogs, Caecilians, and Salamanders in the Brazilian Amazonia
- From the Cordillera Mache-Chindul in Northwestern Ecuador, with Comments on Similar Colostethus and Hyloxalus
- Advertisement Call of Hyloxalus Elachyhistus (Edwards, 1971) (Anura, Dendrobatidae)
- Convergent Evolution of Aposematic Coloration in Neotropical Poison Frogs: a Molecular Phylogenetic Perspective
- Anomaloglossus Confusus, a New Ecuadorian Frog Formerly Masquerading As ‘‘Colostethus’’ Chocoensis (Dendrobatoidea: Aromobatidae)
- Amphibia Mundi. 1.2. Recent Amphibians: Generic and Infrageneric Taxonomic Additions (1981-2002)
- Molecular-Based Rapid Inventories of Sympatric Diversity: a Comparison of DNA Barcode Clustering Methods Applied to Geography-Based Vs
- Appendix 357 Appendix RECENT AMPHIBIAN NAME CHANGES FOR
- Data on Metabolic Rates and Life History Traits Across Poison Frogs
- The North American Bullfrog As a Reservoir for the Spread of Batrachochytrium Dendrobatidis in Brazil L
- (Amphibia: Dendrobatidae), Endemic Species from Eastern Panama and Type Species of Colostethus , with a Molecular Assessment of Similar Sympatric Species
- Bucciarelli, Gary Dissertation 2015
- Size, 14.3 MB
- Proposal to Amend Appendix I Or II for CITES Cop16
- Phylogenomic Reconstruction of the Neotropical Poison Frogs (Dendrobatidae) and Their Conservation
- Tempo and Mode of the Evolution of Venom and Poison in Tetrapods
- Checklist of the Terrestrial Vertebrates of the Guiana Shield
- The Evolution of Coloration and Toxicity in the Poison Frog Family (Dendrobatidae)
- Metabolites from Microbes Isolated from the Skin of the Panamanian Rocket Frog Colostethus Panamansis (Anura: Dendrobatidae)
- The Reproductive Success of Colostethus Stepheni (Anura: Dendrobatidae)
- Phylogenetic Relationships and Systematics of the Amazonian Poison Frog Genus Ameerega Using Ultraconserved Genomic Elements T ⁎ Wilson X
- Amphibians and Reptiles of Cocobolo Nature Reserve
- Antipredator Defences Predict Diversification Rates"