Mostrando 3 resultados de: 3
Catastrophic population declines and extinctions in neotropical harlequin frogs (Bufonidae: Atelopus)
ReviewAbstract: We surveyed the population status of the Neotropical toad genus Atelopus, and document recent catastPalabras claves:amphibians, Atelopus, Climate Change, Declines, disease, extinction, Neotropics, population, tradeAutores:Bolaños F., Castro-Herrera F., Chaves G., Eduardo C. Toral, García-Pérez J.E., Ibáñez R., Lips K.R., Lötters S., Manzanilla-Puppo J., Marca E.L., Marty C., Pounds J.A., Puschendorf R., Rueda-Almonacid J.V., Schulte R., Young B.E.Fuentes:scopusGlobal warming and amphibian losses; The proximate cause of frog declines? (Reply)
OtherAbstract:Palabras claves:Autores:Andres Merino-Viteri, Bustamante M.R., Consuegra J.A., Fogden M.P.L., Foster P.N., Luis A. Coloma, Marca E.L., Masters K.L., Pounds J.A., Puschendorf R., Ron Y.S.R., Sánchez-Azofeifa G.A., Still C.J., Young B.E.Fuentes:scopusWidespread amphibian extinctions from epidemic disease driven by global warming
ReviewAbstract: As the Earth warms, many species are likely to disappear, often because of changing disease dynamicsPalabras claves:Autores:Andres Merino-Viteri, Bustamante M.R., Consuegra J.A., Fogden M.P.L., Foster P.N., Luis A. Coloma, Marca E.L., Masters K.L., Pounds J.A., Puschendorf R., Ron Y.S.R., Sánchez-Azofeifa G.A., Santiago R. Ron, Still C.J., Young B.E.Fuentes:googlescopus