Mostrando 10 resultados de: 10
Filtros aplicados
A new species of glass frog (Centrolenidae: Cochranella) from the lowlands of northwestern Ecuador, with comments on the Cochranella granulosa group
ArticleAbstract: We describe a new species of Cochranella from the Montañas de Mache in the Chocó Ecoregion of the loPalabras claves:CENTROLENIDAE, Chocó Ecoregion, Cochranella granulosa, ECUADOR, Esmeraldas, lowlands, Montañas de Mache, New speciesAutores:Elisa Bonaccorso, Juan Manuel GuayasaminFuentes:googlescopusA taxonomic assessment of Chlorospingus flavopectus phaeocephalus and Chlorospingus semifuscus (Passeriformes: Passerellidae), including the description of a new subspecies
ReviewAbstract: Chlorospingus flavopectus, a widely distributed member of the New World sparrows and finches (PasserPalabras claves:Andes, Bird systematics, ECUADOR, hybridization, Passerellidae, Population barriers, speciation, Speciation barriers, Tumbes-ChocóAutores:Avendaño J.E., Bird B., Elisa Bonaccorso, Fuchs J., Juan Carlos Sánchez-Nivicela, Manuel Sánchez-Nivicela, Torres A.Fuentes:scopusCelebrating Alexander von Humboldt's 250<sup>th</sup> anniversary: Exploring bio- and geodiversity in the Andes (IBS Quito 2019)
OtherAbstract: Alexander von Humboldt conducted his best-known work on the slopes of the Ecuadorian Andes. He did tPalabras claves:Alexander von Humboldt, Biodiversity, Climate, ECUADOR, GeologyAutores:Elisa Bonaccorso, Hoorn C., Juan Manuel Guayasamin, Linder P., Mauricio Ortega-AndradeFuentes:googlescopusNotes on the diet of the Band-bellied Owl (Pulsatrix melanota) in Ecuador
ArticleAbstract:Palabras claves:Band-bellied Owl, Coleopterans, diet, ECUADOR, Orthopterans, Pulsatrix melanota, Stomach analysisAutores:Daniela Bahamonde-Vinueza, Elisa Bonaccorso, Héctor Cadena-OrtízFuentes:scopusHummingbird diversity in a fragmented tropical landscape in the Chocó biogeographic zone
ArticleAbstract: Forest loss and fragmentation drive widespread declines in biodiversity. However, hummingbirds seemPalabras claves:composition, countryside biogeography, ECUADOR, Evenness, fragmentation, Hill numbers, Reserva Ecológica Mache-ChindulAutores:Browne L., Carrasco L., Castillo F., Elisa Bonaccorso, Ellis M., Huh K.M., Juan Rivero-De-Aguilar, Karubian J.Fuentes:scopusParasite specialization in a unique habitat: hummingbirds as reservoirs of generalist blood parasites of Andean birds
ArticleAbstract: Understanding how parasites fill their ecological niches requires information on the processes involPalabras claves:avian malaria, ECUADOR, generalist, Haemoproteus witti, Host specificity, hummingbirds, niche filling, parasitaemia, SpecialistAutores:Anahi Paca, Elisa Bonaccorso, Moens M.A.J., Nikolay Aguirre, Pérez-Tris J., Valkiūnas G.Fuentes:googlescopusUnderstanding the evolutionary history of a high Andean endemic: the Ecuadorian hillstar (Oreotrochilus chimborazo)
ArticleAbstract: Geographic isolation has been proposed as the factor driving subspecific diversity of the EcuadorianPalabras claves:Andes, contact zone, dispersal barrier, ECUADOR, hummingbird, intergradation, Paramo, PhylogeographyAutores:Carlos Antonio Rodríguez-Saltos, Elisa BonaccorsoFuentes:scopusRange extension and description of the juvenile plumage of the Masked Mountain-tanager (Buthraupis wetmorei, Thraupidae)
ArticleAbstract: Here we report the first record of the Masked Mountain-Tanager (Buthraupis wetmorei) for the EasternPalabras claves:Andes, Eastern cordillera, ECUADOR, Juvenile, Paramo, TephrophilusAutores:Cuervo A.M., Elisa Bonaccorso, Gereda O., Leal C.A., Meneses H.S.Fuentes:googlescopusRecent diversification in the high Andes: Unveiling the evolutionary history of the Ecuadorian hillstar, Oreotrochilus chimborazo (Apodiformes: Trochilidae)
ArticleAbstract: Studying the genetic signatures of evolutionary diversification in young lineages is among the mostPalabras claves:admixture, Coalescent, ECUADOR, hummingbird, Paramo, plumage evolutionAutores:Carlos Antonio Rodríguez-Saltos, Elisa Bonaccorso, Juan F. Freile, Laura Rosado-Llerena, Nicolás Peñafiel, Nora H. OleasFuentes:googlescopusPopulation genetics of the Plumbeous Sierra-finch (Geospizopsis unicolor) across the Ecuadorian paramos: uncovering the footprints of the last ice age
ArticleAbstract: We explored how climate change during the last ~ 21,000 years may have affected the distribution andPalabras claves:Andes, ECUADOR, Genetic isolation, High Andean birds, last glacial maximum, PleistoceneAutores:Carlos Antonio Rodríguez-Saltos, Elisa Bonaccorso, Jesús Muñoz, Vélez-Márquez A.Fuentes:scopus