Publications by authors named "Octavio Jimenez Robles"

Forecasts of vulnerability to climate warming require an integrative understanding of how species are exposed to, are damaged by, and recover from thermal stress in natural environments. The sensitivity of species to temperature depends on the frequency, duration, and magnitude of thermal stress. Thus, there is a generally recognized need to move beyond physiological metrics based solely on critical thermal limits and integrate them with natural heat exposure regimes.

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Female and male hosts may maximise their fitness by evolving different strategies to compensate for the costs of parasite infections. The resulting sexual dimorphism might be apparent in differential relationships between parasite load and body condition, potentially reflecting differences in energy allocation to anti-parasitic defences. For example, male lacertids with high body condition may produce many offspring while being intensely parasitised.

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The genus Karyolysus was originally proposed to accommodate blood parasites of lacertid lizards in Western Europe. However, recent phylogenetic analyses suggested an inconclusive taxonomic position of these parasites of the order Adeleorina based on the available genetic information. Inconsistencies between molecular phylogeny, morphology, and/or life cycles can reflect lack of enough genetic information of the target group.

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Background: The movement and spatial ecology of an animal depends on its morphological and functional adaptations to its environment. In fossorial animals, adaptations to the underground life help to face peculiar ecological challenges, very different from those of epigeal species, but may constrain their movement ability.

Methods: We made a long-term capture-recapture study of the strictly fossorial amphisbaenian reptile Trogonophis wiegmanni to analyze its long-term movement patterns.

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Article Synopsis
  • Mechanisms influencing consistent behavioral differences (animal personality) are important for understanding fitness in poikilothermic species, where temperature significantly affects their behavior.
  • Recent findings indicate that individual boldness in these species is related to their thermoregulation strategies, particularly when they face predation risks during basking.
  • Our analysis showed that aspects like limb length, color brightness, parasite load, and preferred body temperature are interconnected and influence boldness and thermoregulatory behaviors, suggesting these traits can vary due to both stable and dynamic factors.
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Climatic conditions changing over time and space shape the evolution of organisms at multiple levels, including temperate lizards in the family Lacertidae. Here we reconstruct a dated phylogenetic tree of 262 lacertid species based on a supermatrix relying on novel phylogenomic datasets and fossil calibrations. Diversification of lacertids was accompanied by an increasing disparity among occupied bioclimatic niches, especially in the last 10 Ma, during a period of progressive global cooling.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the relationship between lizard hosts from the Family Lacertidae and their blood parasites, Schellackia, focusing on how host distribution affects parasite specificity and co-evolution.
  • Researchers sampled 981 lizards across 27 locations in the Iberian Peninsula and northern Africa, discovering a 35% infection rate with 16 distinct Schellackia haplotypes, indicating greater diversity within the genus than previously thought.
  • Findings revealed high host specificity for most haplotypes, with host-switching being rare currently; however, some species displayed non-specific infections suggesting past diversification influenced by host interactions.
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Assembly of ecological communities is important for the conservation of ecosystems, predicting perturbation impacts, and understanding the origin and loss of biodiversity. We tested how amphibian communities are assembled by neutral and niche-based mechanisms, such as habitat filtering. Species richness, β-diversities, and reproductive traits of amphibians were evaluated at local scale in seven habitats at different elevation and disturbance levels in Wisui Biological Station, Morona-Santiago, Ecuador, on the foothills of the Cordillera del Kutukú; and at regional scale using 109 localities across evergreen forests of Amazonia and its Andean slopes (0-3,900 m a.

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