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13 result(s) for 'author#"Rodrigo Medel"' within BMC

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  1. Authors: Niles Eldredge and Gregory Eldredge

    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:238

    Content type: Editorial

    Published on:

  2. Authors: Greg Eldredge and Niles Eldredge

    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:211

    Content type: Editorial

    Published on:

  3. Bombus terrestris is a European bumblebee extensively commercialized worldwide for crop pollination. In Chile, this species was introduced in 1997 and after confinement escape, it has spread and established in se...

    Authors: Kiara Fernández, Jennifer Alcaíno, Dionisia Sepúlveda and Rodrigo Medel

    Citation: Revista Chilena de Historia Natural 2020 93:8

    Content type: Short report

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  4. Eulychnia acida is an endemic Chilean cactus species whose fruits show several traits that, taken as a whole, are compatible with a seed dispersal syndrome by large herbivore vertebrates. Since only a few large n...

    Authors: Rocío A. Cares, Consuelo Sáez-Cordovez, Alfonso Valiente-Banuet, Rodrigo Medel and Carezza Botto-Mahan

    Citation: Revista Chilena de Historia Natural 2018 91:9

    Content type: Short report

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  5. Much of evolution is about the coevolution of species with each other. In recent years, we have learned that coevolution is much more pervasive, dynamic, and relentless than we previously thought. There are fo...

    Authors: John N. Thompson

    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:200

    Content type: Original Scientific Article

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  6. One of the leading hypotheses for the maintenance of sexual reproduction is the Red Queen hypothesis. The underlying premise of the Red Queen hypothesis is that parasites rapidly evolve to infect common host g...

    Authors: Curtis M. Lively

    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:196

    Content type: Original Scientific Article

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  7. Threespine stickleback in young postglacial lakes provide a compelling example of coevolution between species that compete for resources. Coexisting pairs of stickleback species are highly divergent in habitat...

    Authors: Dolph Schluter

    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:204

    Content type: Original Scientific Article

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  8. Consideration of complex geographic patterns of reciprocal adaptation has provided insight into new features of the coevolutionary process. In this paper, we provide ecological, historical, and geographical ev...

    Authors: Rodrigo Medel, Marco A. Mendez, Carmen G. Ossa and Carezza Botto-Mahan

    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2009 3:191

    Content type: Original Scientific Article

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  9. The scientific study of evolution in Chile has experienced periods of diversification and stasis, depending upon the social and political context at different times. In the eighteenth century, most of the natu...

    Authors: Rodrigo Medel

    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2008 1:50

    Content type: Letter

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  10. Coevolution (reciprocal evolutionary change in interacting species) is posited as a major mechanism that creates new species. A challenge has been to understand how coevolution has shaped the patterns of relat...

    Authors: Kari A. Segraves

    Citation: Evolution: Education and Outreach 2010 3:199

    Content type: Original Scientific Article

    Published on: