Listar Biología por autor "Juárez Jovel, Roselvy"
Mostrando ítems 1-5 de 5
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Different Messages are Transmitted by Individual Duet Contributions and Complete Duets in a Species with Highly Overlapped Duets
Sandoval Vargas, Luis Andrés; Juárez Jovel, Roselvy; Garnier Villarreal, Mauricio (2018)Background: Duet function hypotheses have been mostly studied in bird species that produce duets with male and female solo songs. However, in order to understand if patterns of duet function are similar across all duetting ... -
House Wrens Troglodytes aedon reduce repertoire size and change song element frequencies in response to anthropogenic noise
Juárez Jovel, Roselvy; Araya Ajoy, Yi-Men Gerardo; Barrantes Montero, Gilbert; Sandoval Vargas, Luis Andrés (2020-06-09)Anthropogenic noise (≤ 3 kHz) can affect key features of birds’ acoustic communication via two different processes: (1) song-learning, because songbirds need to hear themselves and other birds to crystallize their song, ... -
Surviving in cities: the case of a year-round territorial bird in the Neotropics
Juárez Jovel, Roselvy; Ruiz Gutiérrez, Viviana; Sandoval Vargas, Luis Andrés (2022-03-18)Urban expansion has been identified as one of the main threats to biodiversity because it can negatively affect wildlife populations. However, wildlife population dynamics have not been studied in one of the most rapidly ... -
Territory size, population density, and natural history of Cabanis’s Ground Sparrow, an endemic species found in urban areas
Juárez Jovel, Roselvy; Angulo Irola, Marta de la Paz; Carman, Ernesto; Sandoval Vargas, Luis Andrés (2021)Worldwide urban expansion threatens biodiversity inhabiting the original natural environments now being transformed, especially range-restricted species. Here, we provide estimates of population density, population size, ... -
Urbanization has opposite effects on the territory size of two passerine birds
Juárez Jovel, Roselvy; Chacón Madrigal, Eduardo; Sandoval Vargas, Luis Andrés (2020-04-28)Background: Urban expansion has been identified as one of the leading drivers of biodiversity change or loss. For birds, urbanization is specifically related to survival, breeding success, and territory size. Understanding ...