References
- Steppan SJ, Ramírez O. Genus Phyllotis Waterhouse, 1837. In: Patton JL, Pardiñas UFJ, D’Elía G, editors. Mammals of South America. Volume 2. Rodents. Chicago (IL): The University of Chicago Press; 2015. p. 535–555.
- Pardiñas U, Ruelas D, Brito J, et al. Cricetidae (true hamsters, voles, lemmings and new world rats and mice) - Species accounts of Cricetidae. In: Wilson DE, Lacher TE Jr, Mittermeier RA, editores. Handbook of the Mammals of the World-Volume 7: Rodents II. Barcelona: Lynx Editions; 2017. p. 204.
- Salgado S, Cuesta F, Báez S, et al. Páramo Herbáceo. In: Ministerio del Ambiente del Ecuador, editores, Sistema de Clasificación de los Ecosistemas del Ecuador Continental. Quito: Subsecretaría de Patrimonio Natural; 2013. p. 139–141.
- Albuja L, Almendáriz A, Barriga R, et al. Fauna de vertebrados del Ecuador. Quito: Instituto de Ciencias Biológicas, Escuela Politécnica Nacional; 2012.
- Steppan SJ, Ramírez O, Banbury J, et al. A molecular reappraisal of the systematics of the leaf-eared mice Phyllotis and their relatives. In: Kelt DA, Lessa EP, Salazar-Bravo J, et al., editors. The Quintessential Naturalist: honoring the Life and Legacy of Oliver P. Pearson. Berkeley: University of California Publications in Zoology; 2006. p. 799–826.
- Rengifo EM, Pacheco V. Taxonomic revision of the Andean leaf-eared mouse, Phyllotis andium Thomas 1912 (Rodentia: cricetidae), with the description of a new species. Zootaxa. 2015;4018(3):349–380.
- Meserve PL, Lang BK, Patterson BD. Trophic relationships of small mammals in a Chilean temperate rainforest. J Mammal. 1988;69(4):721–730.
- Pearson OP. Characteristics of a mammalian fauna from forests in Patagonia, southern Argentina. J Mammal. 1983;64:476–492.
- Suárez OV, Bonaventura SM. Habitat use and diet in sympatric species of rodents of the low Paraná delta, Argentina. Mammalia. 2001;65(2):167–176.
- Solari S. Trophic relationships within a Highland rodent assemblage from Manu National Park, Cusco, Peru. In: Kelt DA, Lessa EP, Salazar-Bravo J, et al., editors. The Quintessential Naturalist: honoring the Life and Legacy of Oliver P. Pearson. Berkeley: University of California Publications in Zoology; 2007. p. 225–240.
- Lopez-Cortes F, Cortes A, Miranda E, et al. Dietas de Abrothrix andinus, Phyllotis xanthopygus (Rodentia) y Lepus europaeus (Lagomorpha) en un ambiente altoandino de Chile. Rev Chil Hist Nat. 2007;80(1):3–12.
- Pizzimenti JJ, De Salle ROB. Dietary and morphometric variation in some Peruvian rodent communities: the effect of feeding strategy on evolution. Biol J Linn Soc. 1980;13(4):263–285.
- Cocucci AA, Sérsic AN. Evidence of rodent pollination in Cajophora coronata (Loasaceae). Plant Syst Evol. 1998;211(1–2):113–128.
- Cárdenas S, Nivelo-Villavicencio C, Cárdenas JD, et al. First record of flower visitation by a rodent in Neotropical Proteaceae, Oreocallis grandiflora. J Trop Ecol. 2017;33(2):174–177.
- Dellinger AS, Scheer LM, Artuso S, et al. Bimodal Pollination Systems in Andean Melastomataceae Involving Birds, Bats, and Rodents. Am Nat. 2019;194(1):104–116.
- Lumer C. Rodent pollination of Blakea (Melastomataceae) in a Costa Rican cloud forest. Brittonia. 1980;32(4):512–517.