Biología
Departamento
Universidad de Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires, ArgentinaPublicaciones en colaboración con investigadores/as de Universidad de Buenos Aires (14)
2024
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Lipophrys pholis is larger, grows faster and is in better condition in protected than in unprotected rocky shores
Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems, Vol. 34, Núm. 2
2022
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Site fidelity of fish on a rocky intertidal in the south of Portugal
Journal of Sea Research, Vol. 183
2021
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A new approach for cultivating the cyanobacterium Nostoc calcicola (MACC-612) to produce biomass and bioactive compounds using a thin-layer raceway pond
Algal Research, Vol. 59
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Author Correction: Nutrients cause grassland biomass to outpace herbivory (Nature Communications, (2020), 11, 1, (6036), 10.1038/s41467-020-19870-y)
Nature Communications
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Length-Weight Relationships of Six Fish Species of a Rocky Intertidal Shore on the Subtropical Atlantic Coast of Spain
Thalassas, Vol. 37, Núm. 1, pp. 267-271
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Temporal rarity is a better predictor of local extinction risk than spatial rarity
Ecology, Vol. 102, Núm. 11
2020
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Global impacts of fertilization and herbivore removal on soil net nitrogen mineralization are modulated by local climate and soil properties
Global Change Biology, Vol. 26, Núm. 12, pp. 7173-7185
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Microbial processing of plant remains is co-limited by multiple nutrients in global grasslands
Global Change Biology, Vol. 26, Núm. 8, pp. 4572-4582
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Nutrients cause grassland biomass to outpace herbivory
Nature Communications, Vol. 11, Núm. 1
2019
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Morphological relationship between GnIH and GnRH neurons in the brain of the neotropical cichlid fish Cichlasoma dimerus
General and Comparative Endocrinology, Vol. 273, pp. 144-151
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Soil net nitrogen mineralisation across global grasslands
Nature Communications, Vol. 10, Núm. 1
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The gonadotropin-inhibitory hormone: What we know and what we still have to learn from fish
Frontiers in Endocrinology, Vol. 10, Núm. FEB
2017
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Predicting the consequences of disperser extinction: richness matters the most when abundance is low
Functional Ecology, Vol. 31, Núm. 10, pp. 1910-1920