0000000000886415

AUTHOR

Salvador Carranza

showing 4 related works from this author

Unravelling biodiversity, evolution and threats to conservation in the Sahara-Sahel

2013

Deserts and arid regions are generally perceived as bare and rather homogeneous areas of low diversity. The Sahara is the largest warm desert in the world and together with the arid Sahel displays high topographical and climatic heterogeneity, and has experienced recent and strong climatic oscillations that have greatly shifted biodiversity distribution and community composition. The large size, remoteness and long-term political instability of the Sahara-Sahel, have limited knowledge on its biodiversity. However, over the last decade, there have been an increasing number of published scientific studies based on modern geomatic and molecular tools, and broad sampling of taxa of these region…

2. Zero hunger0106 biological sciences0303 health sciencesEcologyBiodiversity15. Life on landDiversification (marketing strategy)Biology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesNatural resourceGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyBiodiversity hotspot03 medical and health sciences13. Climate actionThreatened speciesBiological dispersalMeasurement of biodiversityGeneral Agricultural and Biological Sciences030304 developmental biologyGlobal biodiversityBiological Reviews
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Molecular phylogenetics and historical biogeography of the west-palearctic common toads (Bufo bufo species complex)

2012

In most pan-Eurasiatic species complexes, two phenomena have been traditionally considered key processes of their cladogenesis and biogeography. First, it is hypothesized that the origin and development of the Central Asian Deserts generated a biogeographic barrier that fragmented past continuous distributions in Eastern and Western domains. Second, Pleistocene glaciations have been proposed as the main process driving the regional diversification within each of these domains. The European common toad and its closest relatives provide an interesting opportunity to examine the relative contributions of these paleogeographic and paleoclimatic events to the phylogeny and biogeography of a wide…

Species complexAmphibianPhylogenyBiogeographyDesertsDiversificationPleistocene glaciationsBiogeographySettore BIO/05 - ZoologiaDNA MitochondrialBufo bufoAmphibiansPleistocene glaciationsGeneticsAnimalsBufoMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyDesertsModels GeneticbiologyEcologyBayes TheoremSequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionIsoenzymesPhylogeographyBiogeographyDiversificationMolecular phylogenetics
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Trade and stowaways: molecular evidence for human-mediated translocation of eastern skinks into the western Mediterranean

2020

Human movements in the regions surrounding the Mediterranean Sea have caused a great impact in the composition of terrestrial fauna due to the introductions of several allochthonous species, intentionally or not. Reptiles are one of the groups where this anthropic impact is most evident, owing to the extensive intra-Mediterranean dispersals of recent chronologies. Chalcides ocellatus is a widespread skink with a natural distribution that covers almost the entire Mediterranean Basin. Two hypotheses have been proposed to explain its origin: natural dispersions and human translocations. Previous molecular data suggest the occurrence of a recent dispersal phenomenon across the Mediterranean Sea…

0106 biological sciencesMediterranean climateSkinkFaunaPopulation010607 zoologySpecies dispersal010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesMediterranean BasinMediterranean seaMediterranean SeaeducationChalcides ocellatusEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicseducation.field_of_studybiologyEcologyReptilesDNAbiology.organism_classificationChalcides ocellatusIntroductionsSpainBiological dispersalAnimal Science and ZoologyAmphibia - Reptilia
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Trade and stowaways: molecular evidence for human-mediated translocation of eastern skinks into the western Mediterranean: supplementary material

2019

Human movements in the regions surrounding the Mediterranean Sea have caused a great impact in the composition of terrestrial fauna due to the introductions of several allochthonous species, intentionally or not. Reptiles are one of the groups where this anthropic impact is most evident, owing to the extensive intra-Mediterranean dispersals of recent chronologies. Chalcides ocellatus is a widespread skink with a natural distribution that covers almost the entire Mediterranean Basin. Two hypotheses have been proposed to explain its origin: natural dispersions and human translocations. Previous molecular data suggest the occurrence of a recent dispersal phenomenon across the Mediterranean Sea…

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