BIOLOGÍA ANIMAL, BIOLOLOGÍA VEGETAL Y ECOLOGÍA
Departamento
ANA
GONZÁLEZ ROBLES
TITULADO SUPERIOR
Publicaciones en las que colabora con ANA GONZÁLEZ ROBLES (11)
2021
-
Extensive pollen-mediated gene flow across intensively managed landscapes in an insect-pollinated shrub native to semiarid habitats
Molecular Ecology, Vol. 30, Núm. 14, pp. 3408-3421
2020
-
Habitat loss and degradation due to farming intensification modify the floral visitor assemblages of a semiarid keystone shrub
Ecological Entomology, Vol. 45, Núm. 6, pp. 1476-1489
-
Spatial genetic structure of a keystone long-lived semiarid shrub: historical effects prevail but do not cancel the impact of recent severe habitat loss on genetic diversity
Conservation Genetics, Vol. 21, Núm. 5, pp. 853-867
-
TRY plant trait database – enhanced coverage and open access
Global Change Biology, Vol. 26, Núm. 1, pp. 119-188
2018
-
Morphometric study of the complex Moehringia sect. Pseudomoehringia McNeill from the western Mediterranean
Plant Biosystems, Vol. 152, Núm. 5, pp. 1109-1117
-
Regeneration of a keystone semiarid shrub over its range in Spain: habitat degradation overrides the positive effects of plant–animal mutualisms
Plant Biology, Vol. 20, Núm. 6, pp. 1083-1092
2017
-
Landscape degradation affects red fox (Vulpes vulpes) diet and its ecosystem services in the threatened Ziziphus lotus scrubland habitats of semiarid Spain
Journal of Arid Environments, Vol. 145, pp. 24-34
-
Local-scale and landscape disturbances impact through distinct pathways on the regional variation in seed dispersal by mammals in threatened semiarid habitats
Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics, Vol. 28, pp. 10-18
2016
-
Development and characterization of microsatellite primers in the endangered mediterranean shrub Ziziphus lotus (Rhamnaceae)
Applications in Plant Sciences, Vol. 4, Núm. 12
-
Habitat loss exacerbates regional extinction risk of the keystone semiarid shrub Ziziphus lotus through collapsing the seed dispersal service by foxes (Vulpes vulpes)
Biodiversity and Conservation, Vol. 25, Núm. 4, pp. 693-709