taxonID	type	format	identifier	references	title	description	created	creator	contributor	publisher	audience	source	license	rightsHolder	datasetID
4C25F93FFFB6AD5BFC84FC4DFB770CDC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/16969942/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.16969942	Figure 4. Number of publications on anuran intersexual selection per research theme. Numbers inside circles intersections indicate the number of publications classified in two or more themes.	Figure 4. Number of publications on anuran intersexual selection per research theme. Numbers inside circles intersections indicate the number of publications classified in two or more themes.	2025-04-07	Bernardy, José Vinícius;Llusia, Diego;Bastos, and Rogério Pereira		Zenodo	biologists	Bernardy, José Vinícius;Llusia, Diego;Bastos, and Rogério Pereira			
4C25F93FFFB6AD5DFC84F9C2FAF80D60.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/16969948/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.16969948	Figure 5. Anuran species most studied regarding intersexual selection and their zones of occurrence, considering those with five or more publications.	Figure 5. Anuran species most studied regarding intersexual selection and their zones of occurrence, considering those with five or more publications.	2025-04-07	Bernardy, José Vinícius;Llusia, Diego;Bastos, and Rogério Pereira		Zenodo	biologists	Bernardy, José Vinícius;Llusia, Diego;Bastos, and Rogério Pereira			
4C25F93FFFB6AD5DFC84F9C2FAF80D60.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/16969944/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.16969944	Figure 6. Number of publications on anuran intersexual selection per species and zones.	Figure 6. Number of publications on anuran intersexual selection per species and zones.	2025-04-07	Bernardy, José Vinícius;Llusia, Diego;Bastos, and Rogério Pereira		Zenodo	biologists	Bernardy, José Vinícius;Llusia, Diego;Bastos, and Rogério Pereira			
4C25F93FFFB6AD5DFC84F9C2FAF80D60.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/16969952/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.16969952	Figure 7. Number of studied species and average publication per species by country. Circle size represents the proportion of anuran diversity studied in the country. Circle shade represents the standard deviation of publications among species. The circle color represents the zone in which each country is located (tropical, temperate, or mixed). The following countries are highlighted: the country with the most species studied (China); countries with at least 100 anuran species with the highest and lowest proportion of their diversity studied (United States and Cameroon respectively); all countries with at least 400 known anuran species (Brazil, Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, India, Indonesia, and Madagascar); most diverse countries from Oceania and Europe (Australia and Spain respectively).	Figure 7. Number of studied species and average publication per species by country. Circle size represents the proportion of anuran diversity studied in the country. Circle shade represents the standard deviation of publications among species. The circle color represents the zone in which each country is located (tropical, temperate, or mixed). The following countries are highlighted: the country with the most species studied (China); countries with at least 100 anuran species with the highest and lowest proportion of their diversity studied (United States and Cameroon respectively); all countries with at least 400 known anuran species (Brazil, Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, India, Indonesia, and Madagascar); most diverse countries from Oceania and Europe (Australia and Spain respectively).	2025-04-07	Bernardy, José Vinícius;Llusia, Diego;Bastos, and Rogério Pereira		Zenodo	biologists	Bernardy, José Vinícius;Llusia, Diego;Bastos, and Rogério Pereira			
