Mostrando 4 resultados de: 4
Filtros aplicados
Subtipo de publicación
Article(4)
Human activity can influence the gut microbiota of Darwin's finches in the Galapagos Islands
ArticleAbstract: The gut microbiota of animal hosts can be influenced by environmental factors, such as unnatural fooPalabras claves:Birds, Darwin's finches, Galapagos islands, microbiome, species interactionsAutores:Gotanda K.M., Jaime A. Chaves, Knutie S.A.Fuentes:googlescopusUrbanization erodes niche segregation in Darwin's finches
ArticleAbstract: Urbanization is influencing patterns of biological evolution in ways that are only beginning to be ePalabras claves:adaptive divergence, GALAPAGOS, human disturbances, maladaptation, niche partitioning, resource distribution, Urban ecology, UrbanizationAutores:De León L.F., Gotanda K.M., Hendry A.P., Jaime A. Chaves, Podos J., Raeymaekers J.A.M., Sharpe D.M.T.Fuentes:googlescopusThe ecology and evolution of seed predation by Darwin's finches on Tribulus cistoides on the Galápagos Islands
ArticleAbstract: Predator–prey interactions play a key role in the evolution of species traits through antagonistic cPalabras claves:adaptive divergence, coevolutionary arms race, geographic mosaic, phenotypic selection, Plant defense, trophic interactionsAutores:Carmona D., Emery N.C., Gotanda K.M., Hendry A.P., Jaime A. Chaves, Johnson M.T.J., Jonathan Davies T., Neu C.P., Sofía Carvajal-EndaraFuentes:scopusThe gut of the finch: Uniqueness of the gut microbiome of the Galápagos vampire finch 06 Biological Sciences 0602 Ecology 05 Environmental Sciences 0502 Environmental Science and Management
ArticleAbstract: Background: Darwin's finches are a clade of 19 species of passerine birds native to the Galápagos IsPalabras claves:Blood-feeding, Darwin's finches, Galapagos islands, Geospiza, microbiomeAutores:Baldassarre D.T., Brenner A., Dawson K.S., Goffbkp_redi S.K., Gotanda K.M., Jaime A. Chaves, Mccormack J.E., Michel A.J., Mullin S.W., O'Neill A., Orphan V.J., Tender G.S., Uy J.A.C., Ward L.M., Yu K.Fuentes:scopus