Mostrando 10 resultados de: 12
Publisher
Ecology(2)
Acta Amazonica(1)
Behavioral Ecology(1)
Comparative Social Evolution(1)
Ecology and Evolution(1)
Community-wide body size differences between nocturnal and diurnal insects
ArticleAbstract: Examining community-wide patterns for the most diverse animal group, insects, is fundamental to ourPalabras claves:Anelosimus, body size, Diel patterns, ECUADOR, Elevational gradients, Insects, INVENTORY, Social spiders, Tropical communityAutores:Avilés L., Jennifer GuevaraFuentes:scopusCaught in the web: Spider web architecture affects prey specialization and spider–prey stoichiometric relationships
ArticleAbstract: Quantitative approaches to predator–prey interactions are central to understanding the structure ofPalabras claves:ecological stoichiometry, food webs, Nitrogen, phosphorus, predator–prey interactions, spider webs, threshold elemental ratioAutores:Avilés L., Barbour M.A., González A.L., Jennifer Guevara, Ludwig L.Fuentes:scopusElevational changes in the composition of insects and other terrestrial arthropods at tropical latitudes: A comparison of multiple sampling methods and social spider diets
ArticleAbstract: 1. We explored the extent to which differences between elevations in arthropod composition - insectsPalabras claves:altitudinal gradients, Anelosimus, Arthropod community, ECUADOR, Insect diversity, sampling methods, social behaviour, SpidersAutores:Avilés L., Jennifer GuevaraFuentes:scopusEcological pbkp_redictors of spider sociality in the Americas
ArticleAbstract: Aim: To evaluate the relative importance of environmental factors relevant to specific hypotheses thPalabras claves:Anelosimus, Biogeographical patterns, Distribution modelling, elevational gradient, Insect size, latitudinal gradient, predation, Rain intensity, seasonalityAutores:Avilés L., Jennifer GuevaraFuentes:scopusMulti-taxa ecological responses to habitat loss and fragmentation in western amazonia as revealed by rapeld biodiversity surveys
ArticleAbstract: Habitat loss and fragmentation caused by deforestation are important anthropogenic drivers of changePalabras claves:Deforestation, ECUADOR, species distribution, Tropical forestsAutores:Emmanuel Ambriz, Gabriel M. Moulatlet, Jennifer Guevara, López K.G., Marina Rodes-Blanco, Mauricio Ortega-Andrade, Nereida Guerra-Arévalo, Pablo E. MenesesFuentes:googlescopusMultiple techniques confirm elevational differences in insect size that may influence spider sociality
ArticleAbstract: Social and subsocial spiders of the genus Anelosimus exhibit an altitudinal pattern in their geograpPalabras claves:altitudinal gradients, Anelosimus, body size, Converse Bergmann rule, INVENTORY, sampling techniques, SOCIAL BEHAVIOR, SpidersAutores:Avilés L., Jennifer GuevaraFuentes:scopusInfluence of body size and level of cooperation on the prey capture efficiency of two sympatric social spiders exhibiting an included niche pattern
ArticleAbstract: 1. Body size and other morphological traits play key roles in an animal's performance and thus theirPalabras claves:Anelosimus, diet, foraging behaviour, Group foraging, group size, niche differentiation, performance, prey size, sociality, Spider communityAutores:Avilés L., Jennifer GuevaraFuentes:scopusLetter from the new Editor-in-Chief - Linking global priorities: biodiversity and scientific equity
OtherAbstract:Palabras claves:Autores:Jennifer GuevaraFuentes:scopusTrait overdispersion and the role of sociality in the assembly of social spider communities across the Americas
ArticleAbstract: Among the factors that may lead to differences in resource use among closely related species, body sPalabras claves:Anelosimus, Functional diversity, habitat filtering, limiting similarity, Trait overdispersionAutores:Avilés L., Fernandez-Fournier P., Hoffman C., Jennifer GuevaraFuentes:scopusSize-dependent colouration balances conspicuous aposematism and camouflage
ArticleAbstract: Colour is an important component of many different defensive strategies, but signal efficacy and detPalabras claves:Aposematism, body size, camouflage, Colour change, DENDROBATIDAE, Leptodactylidae, Mullerian mimicry, OntogenyAutores:Anderson H.M., Barnett J.B., Jennifer Guevara, Justin Yeager, Kinley I., McEwen B.L.Fuentes:scopus