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Ary Teixeira de Oliveira-Filho

Researcher at Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

Publications -  136
Citations -  8806

Ary Teixeira de Oliveira-Filho is an academic researcher from Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais. The author has contributed to research in topics: Species richness & Biodiversity. The author has an hindex of 46, co-authored 135 publications receiving 7847 citations. Previous affiliations of Ary Teixeira de Oliveira-Filho include Universidade Federal de Lavras.

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Patterns of Floristic Differentiation among Atlantic Forests in Southeastern Brazil and the Influence of Climate1

TL;DR: In this article, the variations in floristic composition of both rain and semi-deciduous forests were analyzed in terms of geographic and climatic variables by performing multivariate analyses on 125 existing checklists.
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Woody Plant Diversity, Evolution, and Ecology in the Tropics: Perspectives from Seasonally Dry Tropical Forests

TL;DR: It is argued that this is evidence that the SDTF is a metacommunity (biome) for woody plant clades, and that phylogenetic, population genetic, biogeographic, and community ecological patterns differ in woody plants from tropical rain forests and savannas.
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Plant diversity patterns in neotropical dry forests and their conservation implications

Dryflor, +67 more
- 23 Sep 2016 - 
TL;DR: Using 835 inventories covering 4660 species of woody plants, marked floristic turnover among inventories and regions indicates that numerous conservation areas across many countries will be needed to protect the full diversity of tropical dry forests.
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Effects of past disturbance and edges on tree community structure and dynamics within a fragment of tropical semideciduous forest in south-eastern Brazil over a five-year period (1987-1992)

TL;DR: A canonical correspondence analysis indicated that the effects of past disturbance regimes and edges were highly related to the species distribution in the area, with less common species enjoying higher recruitment rates and density increase compared to the more common ones.
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Plant diversity hotspots in the Atlantic coastal forests of Brazil.

TL;DR: The distributions of endemic and endemic-threatened species of Myrtaceae were used to indicate areas of plant diversity and conservation importance within the Atlantic coastal forests of Brazil and those areas with the most endemic species were identified.