49 results on '"Gómez‐Martínez, Carmelo"'
Search Results
2. Venous leg ulcer healing as a determinant of quality of life in patients treated with unna boot: A quasi-experimental study.
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Galvão de Oliveira, Mário Lins, León-Morillas, Felipe, Andriola, Isadora Costa, Gómez Martínez, Carmelo Sergio, Dantas, Bruno Araújo da Silva, and Torres, Gilson de Vasconcelos
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COMPRESSION therapy ,CONVENIENCE sampling (Statistics) ,LEG ulcers ,SOCIAL interaction ,SOCIAL skills - Abstract
Our objective was to assess the effect of Venous Leg Ulcer (VLU) healing on Quality of Life (QoL) in patients undergoing compression therapy. This non-randomized, quasi-experimental, and observational study involved patients with VLU. A convenience sample of individuals receiving services was followed for at least one year while undergoing compression therapy. The Medical Outcomes Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36) and the Charing Cross Venous Ulcer Questionnaire (CCVUQ) were employed to measure the variables of interest. Study participants were categorized into the Healed Group (HG) and the Unhealed Group (UG). The final sample comprised 103 individuals. The HG demonstrated improvements in SF-36 scores in the domains of Social Role Functioning (n = 34, p<0.001), Physical Role Functioning (n = 33, p<0.001), and the Physical Health Dimension (n = 38, p<0.001). Additionally, the CCVUQ assessment revealed score enhancements in the domains of Domestic Activities (n = 30, p = 0.001) and Social Interaction (n = 30, p = 0.009). QoL showed significant improvements in functionality, physical performance, and social interaction in the HG after one year of compression therapy treatment. In contrast, the UG was the only group to experience significant deteriorations in QoL. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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3. The role of heterogenous environmental conditions in shaping the spatiotemporal distribution of competing Aedes mosquitoes in Panama: implications for the landscape of arboviral disease transmission
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Bennett, Kelly L., McMillan, W. Owen, Enríquez, Vanessa, Barraza, Elia, Díaz, Marcela, Baca, Brenda, Whiteman, Ari, Cerro Medina, Jaime, Ducasa, Madeleine, Gómez Martínez, Carmelo, Almanza, Alejandro, Rovira, Jose R., and Loaiza, Jose R.
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- 2021
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4. 42 - Demencia
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Herrera Barcia, Tania, Lendínez Mesa, Alejandro, and Gómez Martínez, Carmelo
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- 2025
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5. 5 - Bases éticas de la atención sanitaria a la persona mayor. Dignidad de la persona mayor y derechos. Visiones del envejecimiento. Edadismo
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Gómez Martínez, Carmelo
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- 2025
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6. A new tool to improve the estimates of interaction rewiring considering the whole community composition.
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Gómez‐Martínez, Carmelo and Lázaro, Amparo
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BIOLOGICAL extinction ,TIME-varying networks ,ECOSYSTEM dynamics ,FOOD chains ,PHENOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Methods in Ecology & Evolution is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2024
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7. Pollen analysis reveals the effects of uncovered interactions, pollen‐carrying structures, and pollinator sex on the structure of wild bee–plant networks.
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Tourbez, Clément, Gómez‐Martínez, Carmelo, González‐Estévez, Miguel Ángel, and Lázaro, Amparo
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PALYNOLOGY , *POLLINATORS , *POLLINATION , *POLLEN , *PLANT communities , *PLANT species - Abstract
Pollination networks are increasingly used to model the complexity of interactions between pollinators and flowering plants in communities. Different methods exist to sample these interactions, with direct observations of plant–pollinator contacts in the field being by far the most common. Although the identification of pollen carried by pollinators allows uncovering interactions and increasing sample sizes, the methods used to build pollen‐transport networks are variable and their effect on network structure remains unclear. To understand how interaction sampling influences the structure of networks, we analyzed the pollen found on wild bees from eight communities across Mallorca Island and investigated the differences in pollen loads between bee body parts (scopa vs. body) and sexes. We then assessed how these differences, as well as the uncovered interactions not detected in the field, influenced the structure of wild bee–plant networks. We identified a higher quantity and diversity of pollen in the scopa than in the rest of the female body, but these differences did not lead to differences in structure between plant‐pollination (excluding scopa pollen) and bee‐feeding interaction (including scopa pollen) networks. However, networks built with pollen data were richer in plant species and interactions and showed lower modularity and specialization (H2'), and higher nestedness than visitation networks based on field observations. Female interactions with plants were stronger compared to those of males, although not richer. Accordingly, females were more generalist (low d') and tended to be more central in interaction networks, indicating their more key role structuring pollination networks in comparison to males. Our study highlights the importance of palynological data to increase the resolution of networks, as well as to understand important ecological questions such as the differences between plant‐pollination and bee‐feeding interaction networks, and the role of sexes in pollination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Duelo y optimismo en tiempos de covid-19
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Sánchez-Martínez, María José, primary, Gómez-Díaz, Magdalena, additional, Orteso-Rivadeneira, Javier, additional, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo Sergio, additional, Rosa-Alcazar, Ángel, additional, García-Mercader, Emilio José, additional, Morán-Sánchez, Inés, additional, and Moya-Faz, Francisco José, additional
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- 2023
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9. Forest fragmentation modifies the composition of bumblebee communities and modulates their trophic and competitive interactions for pollination
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Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, Aase, Anne Lene T. O., Totland, Ørjan, Rodríguez-Pérez, Javier, Birkemoe, Tone, Sverdrup-Thygeson, Anne, and Lázaro, Amparo
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- 2020
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10. Factores relacionados con el maltrato no institucional en residencias de personas mayores
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Gómez Martínez, Carmelo, Hernández Morante, Juan José, Carrasco Martínez, Elena, García Belzunce, Agustín, and Nicolás Alarcón, Virginia
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- 2016
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11. Pollinator richness, pollination networks and diet adjustment along local and landscape gradients of resource diversity [Dataset]
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Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo [0000-0003-1449-0138], Lázaro, Amparo [0000-0001-5626-4134], Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo [cgomez@imedea.uib-csic.es], González-Estévez, Miguel A. [mgonzalez@imedea.uib-csic.es], Cursach, Joana [joana.cursach@uib.es], Lázaro, Amparo [amparo.lazaro@imedea.uib-csic.es], Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, González-Estévez, Miguel A., Cursach, Joana, Lázaro, Amparo, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo [0000-0003-1449-0138], Lázaro, Amparo [0000-0001-5626-4134], Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo [cgomez@imedea.uib-csic.es], González-Estévez, Miguel A. [mgonzalez@imedea.uib-csic.es], Cursach, Joana [joana.cursach@uib.es], Lázaro, Amparo [amparo.lazaro@imedea.uib-csic.es], Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, González-Estévez, Miguel A., Cursach, Joana, and Lázaro, Amparo
- Abstract
Loss of habitats and native species, introduction of invasive species, and changing climate regimes lead to the homogenization of landscapes and communities, affecting the availability of habitats and resources for economically important guilds, such as pollinators. Understanding how pollinators and their interactions vary along resource diversity gradients at different scales may help to determine their adaptability to current diversity loss related to global change. We used data on 20 plant-pollinator communities along gradients of flower richness (local diversity) and landscape heterogeneity (landscape diversity) to understand how the diversity of resources at local and landscape scales affected: (1) wild pollinator abundance and richness (accounting also for honeybee abundance); (2) the structure of plant-pollinator networks; (3) the proportion of actively selected interactions (those not occurring by neutral processes) and (4) pollinator diet breadth and species’ specialization in networks. Wild pollinator abundance was higher overall in flower-rich and heterogeneous habitats, while wild pollinator richness increased with flower richness (more strongly for beetles and wild bees) and decreased with honeybee abundance. Network specialization (H2’), modularity, and functional complementarity were all positively related to floral richness and landscape heterogeneity, indicating niche segregation as the diversity of resources increases at both scales. Flower richness also increased the proportion of actively selected interactions (especially for wild bees and flies), whereas landscape heterogeneity had a weak negative effect on this variable. Overall, network-level metrics responded to larger landscape scales than pollinator-level metrics did. Higher floral richness resulted in a wider taxonomic and functional diet for all the study guilds, while functional diet increased mainly for beetles. Despite this, specialization in networks (d’) increased with flower richnes
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- 2022
12. Portfolio effect and asynchrony as drivers of stability in plant-pollinator communities along a gradient of landscape heterogeneity [Dataset]
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Lázaro, Amparo [0000-0001-5626-4134], Hidalgo, Manuel [0000-0002-3494-9658], Lázaro, Amparo [amparo.lazaro@imedea.uib-csic.es], Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo [cgomez@imedea.uib-csic.es], González-Estévez, Miguel Ángel [mgonzalez@imedea.uib-csic.es], Hidalgo, Manuel [jm.hidalgo@ieo.es], Lázaro, Amparo, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, González-Estévez, Miguel A., Hidalgo, Manuel, Lázaro, Amparo [0000-0001-5626-4134], Hidalgo, Manuel [0000-0002-3494-9658], Lázaro, Amparo [amparo.lazaro@imedea.uib-csic.es], Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo [cgomez@imedea.uib-csic.es], González-Estévez, Miguel Ángel [mgonzalez@imedea.uib-csic.es], Hidalgo, Manuel [jm.hidalgo@ieo.es], Lázaro, Amparo, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, González-Estévez, Miguel A., and Hidalgo, Manuel
- Abstract
Understanding how pollination services can be maintained in increasingly anthropogenic landscapes is a current challenge for basic and applied ecology. The stability of plant-pollinator communities might increase in heterogeneous landscapes with a high diversity of species and alternative habitats, both through increased portfolio effect (property of communities to fluctuate less than the sum of its counterparts) and decreased synchrony (coincident changes in species abundance). However, how these drivers of stability (portfolio effect and synchrony) vary along land-use gradients remains largely unknown. Using independent samplings for plants, pollinators, and their interactions in Mediterranean communities along a gradient of landscape heterogeneity, we assessed the relationships between within-year stability and its drivers; and between the drivers of stability, landscape heterogeneity, and species diversity. Besides, we evaluated the relationships between the drivers of interaction stability and the structure of mutualistic networks (modularity, nestedness, connectance). Stability increased with larger portfolio effects and asynchronies. Interaction stability was positively related to pollinator stability, but not to plant stability. Landscape evenness increased the stability of plants, pollinators, and their interactions, through increased portfolio effects. However, for plants and pollinators, the landscape effect was detected at a smaller scale (1-km) than for interactions (2-km); and for pollinators and interactions, the effect was only evident from medium-to-high levels of landscape evenness. Temporal synchrony of species/pairwise interactions was an important driver of stability, tightly linked to species/interaction diversity. More asynchronous communities showed a larger portfolio effect and were also those with higher species evenness for all plants, pollinators, and their interactions; while synchrony was also weakly positively related to species richne
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- 2022
13. Dynamics and diversity of bacteria associated with the disease vectors Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus
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Bennett, Kelly L., Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, Chin, Yamileth, Saltonstall, Kristin, McMillan, W. Owen, Rovira, Jose R., and Loaiza, Jose R.
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- 2019
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14. High infestation of invasive Aedes mosquitoes in used tires along the local transport network of Panama
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Bennett, Kelly L., Gómez Martínez, Carmelo, Almanza, Alejandro, Rovira, Jose R., McMillan, W. Owen, Enriquez, Vanessa, Barraza, Elia, Diaz, Marcela, Sanchez-Galan, Javier E., Whiteman, Ari, Gittens, Rolando A., and Loaiza, Jose R.
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- 2019
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15. Sociosanitary Legal and Economic Aspects in Nursing Homes for the Elderly in Spain
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Vilaplana-Prieto, Cristina, primary, Gómez Martínez, Carmelo S., additional, Echevarría Pérez, Paloma, additional, and Legaz, Isabel, additional
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- 2023
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16. Colaboradores
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Abizanda Soler, Pedro, Aguado Blanco, Cristina, Alcantud Córcoles, Rubén, Alegre Durán, Luis María, Álvarez Bueno, Celia, Ara Royo, Ignacio, Avendaño Céspedes, Almudena, Azcárate Cenoz, Nerea, Ballester Ferrando, David, Baltasar Fernández, Iván, Barbeta Mir, Concepció, Bautista Reina, M.ª del Carmen, Bernués Caudillo, Leticia, Blanco Barredo, Francisco J., Bullich Marín, Ingrid, Calvo Monedero, Ignacio, Cámara Liebana, David, Cambra Rufino, Laura, Cameselle Lago, Candela, Canalias Reverter, Montserrat, Castro González, María Paz, Celaya Cifuentes, Sara, Ceres Martínez, Raquel, Cintora Sanz, Ana María, Cipriano Crespo, María Carmen, Company Sancho, María Consuelo, Corregidor Sánchez, Ana Isabel, Cortés Zamora, Elisa Belén, Cuñarro Alonso, Juan Manuel, de la Fuente Núñez, Vânia, de la Rica Escuín, M.ª Luisa, Dorado Chaparro, Javier, Durán Sáenz, Iván, Egido Fernández, Antonia, Elexpuru Estomba, Jaione, Esandi Larramendi, Nuria, Estellés Barrot, Maribel, João Forjaz, Maria, García Cantos, Nuria, García López, María Victoria, García Molina, Rafael, Gómez Ballesteros, Cristina, Gómez Jiménez, Elena, Gómez Martínez, Carmelo, González Vaca, Julia, Hernández Olivares, Ana Loreto, Herrera Barcia, Tania, Hijar Jiménez, Raquel, Honrubia Pérez, María, Jiménez Navascúes, Lourdes, Juárez España, María, Justo Gil, Soledad, Leitón Espinoza, Zoila Esperanza, Lendínez Mesa, Alejandro, Lluch Canut, Maria Teresa, López Bru, Rita, López López, Juan Carlos, López Sánchez, Miriam, Macías Colorado, María Eulalia, Mariscal Pérez, Sonia, Martín García, Andrea, Martín Martínez, Alberto, Martínez Cuervo, Fernando, Martínez Sellarés, Rosa, Melendo Azuela, Eva María, Miguel Alhambra, Luciana, Molero Bastante, María, Molés Julio, María Pilar, Montilla Fernández, María José, Moreno Casbas, María Teresa, Niño Martín, María Virtudes, Palazón Valcárcel, Laura, Paredes Nogales, Irene, Partezani Rodrigues, Rosalina Aparecida, Planas Campmany, Carmen, Plaza Rivera, Sara, Pola Ferrández, Elena, Pousada Fonseca, Álvaro, Pozo Menéndez, Elisa, Price, Angeline, Puig Llobet, Montserrat, Reyero Ortega, Begoña, Rodríguez Blázquez, Carmen, Rodríguez Martín, Beatriz, Rodríguez Martín, Dolors, Rodríguez Sánchez, Beatriz, Rojas Ocaña, María Jesús, Ropero Sánchez, Andrea, Lucía Rossi, Cecilia, Ruiz Grao, Marta Carolina, Sánchez Reolid, Jennifer, Santana Martínez, Lourdes, Santofimia Romero, María José, Sarabia Cobo, Carmen, Setó Gort, Laia, Sevilla Muñoz, Inmaculada, Sopeña Vallejo, Montserrat, Soria Robles, Ana Isabel, Suárez Guerra, Ana María, Suriñach Pérez, Montserrat, Vázquez Casares, Ana, Vera Remartínez, Enrique J., Vilches Moraga, Arturo, and Yubero Pancorbo, Raquel
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- 2025
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17. Base de datos de abejas ibéricas
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Bartomeus, Ignasi, Lanuza, Jose B., Wood, Thomas J., Carvalheiro, Luisa, Molina, Francisco P., Collado, Miguel Ángel, Aguado-Martín, Luis Oscar, Alomar, David, Álvarez-Fidalgo, Marián, Álvarez Fidalgo, Piluca, Arista, Montserrat, Arroyo-Correa, Blanca, Asís, Josep D., Azpiazu, Celeste, Baños-Picón, Laura, Beja, Pedro, Boieiro, Mário, Borges, Paulo A. V., González Bornay, Guillermo, Carvalho, Rafael, Casimiro-Soriguer, Ramón, Castro, Silvia, Costa, Joana, Cross, Ian, De la Rúa, Pilar, de Pablos, Luis MIguel, de Paz, Víctor, Díaz-Calafat, Joan, Ferrero, Victoria, Gaspar, Hugo, Ghisbain, Guillaume, Gómez, José María, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, González-Estévez, Miguel Ángel, Heleno, Ruben, Herrera, Jose M., Hormaza, Jose I., Iriondo, Jose M., Kuhlmann, Michael, Laiolo, Paola, Lara-Romero, Carlos, Lázaro, Amparo, López-Angulo, Jesús, López-Núñez, Francisco A., Loureiro, João, Magrach, Ainhoa, Martínez-López, Vicente, Martínez-Núñez, Carlos, Michez, Denis, Miñarro, Marcos, Montero-Castaño, Ana, Moreira, Bruno, Morente-López, Javier, Noval Fonseca, Nacho, Núñez Carbajal, Alejandro, Obeso, José Ramón, Ornosa, Concepción, Ortiz-Sánchez, Francisco Javier, Pareja Bonilla, Daniel, Patiny, Sébastien, Penado, Andreia, Picanço, Ana, Ploquin, Emilie F., Rego, Carla, Rey, Pedro J., Ribas-Marquès, Elisa, Roberts, Stuart P.M., Rodriguez, Marta, Rosas-Ramos, Natalia, Sánchez, Ana M., Santamaría, Silvia, Tobajas, Estefanía, Tormos, José, Torres, Félix, Trillo, Alejandro, Valverde, Javier, Vilà, Montserrat, Viñuela, Elisa, Rasmont, Pierre, Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Portugal), and European Commission
- Subjects
Península ibérica ,Anthophila ,Apoidea ,base de datos ,biodiversidad ,fenología ,península ibérica ,polinizadores ,Ecology ,Pollinators ,Polinizadores ,Base de Datos ,Biodiversity ,Península Ibérica ,Base de datos ,Biodiversidad ,Database ,Fenología ,Phenology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Iberian Peninsula - Abstract
[ES] Las abejas son un grupo extremadamente diverso con más de 1000 especies descritas en la península ibérica. Además, son excelentes polinizadores y aportan numerosos servicios ecosistémicos fundamentales para la mayoría de ecosistemas terrestres. Debido a los diversos cambios ambientales inducidos por el ser humano, existen evidencias del declive de algunas de sus poblaciones para ciertas especies. Sin embargo, conocemos muy poco del estado de conservación de la mayoría de especies y de muchas de ellas ignoramos cuál es su distribución en la península ibérica. En este trabajo presentamos un esfuerzo colaborativo para crear una base de datos de ocurrencias de abejas que abarca la península ibérica e islas Baleares que permitirá resolver cuestiones como la distribución de las diferentes especies, preferencia de hábitat, fenología o tendencias históricas. En su versión actual, esta base de datos contiene un total de 87 684 registros de 923 especies recolectados entre 1830 y 2022, de los cuales un 87% presentan información georreferenciada. Para cada registro se incluye información relativa a la localidad de muestreo (89%), identificador y colector de la especie (64%), fecha de captura (54%) y planta donde se recolectó (20%). Creemos que esta base de datos es el punto de partida para conocer y conservar mejor la biodiversidad de abejas en la península ibérica e Islas Baleares, [EN] Bees are a diverse group with more than 1000 species known from the Iberian Peninsula. They have increasingly received special attention due to their important role as pollinators and providers of ecosystem services. In addition, various rapid human-induced environmental changes are leading to the decline of some of its populations. However, we know very little about the conservation status of most species and for many species, we hardly know their true distributions across the Iberian Peninsula. Here, we present a collaborative effort to collate and curate a database of Iberian bee occurrences to answer questions about their distribution, habitat preference, phenology, or historical trends. In total we have accumulated 87 684 records from the Iberian Peninsula and the Balearic Islands of 923 different species with 87% of georeferenced records collected between 1830 and 2022. In addition, each record has associated information such as the sampling location (89%), collector and person who identified the species (64%), date of the capture (54%) and plant species where the bees were captured (20%). We believe that this database is the starting point to better understand and conserve bee biodiversity in the Iberian Peninsula., Esta base de datos se ha realizado con la ayuda de los proyectos EUCLIPO (Fundaçao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia, LISBOA-01-0145- FEDER-028360/EUCLIPO) y SAFEGUARD (ref. 101003476 H2020-SFS-2019-2).
- Published
- 2022
18. Base de datos de abejas ibéricas
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Bartomeus, Ignasi, primary, Lanuza, Jose B., additional, Wood, Thomas J., additional, Carvalheiro, Luisa, additional, Molina, Francisco P., additional, Collado, Miguel Ángel, additional, Aguado-Martín, Luis Oscar, additional, Alomar, David, additional, Álvarez-Fidalgo, Marián, additional, Álvarez Fidalgo, Piluca, additional, Arista, Montserrat, additional, Arroyo-Correa, Blanca, additional, Asís, Josep D., additional, Azpiazu, Celeste, additional, Baños-Picón, Laura, additional, Beja, Pedro, additional, Boieiro, Mário, additional, Borges, Paulo A.V., additional, González Bornay, Guillermo, additional, Carvalho, Rafael, additional, Casimiro-Soriguer, Ramón, additional, Castro, Silvia, additional, Costa, Joana, additional, Cross, Ian, additional, De la Rúa, Pilar, additional, de Pablos, Luis MIguel, additional, de Paz, Víctor, additional, Díaz-Calafat, Joan, additional, Ferrero, Victoria, additional, Gaspar, Hugo, additional, Ghisbain, Guillaume, additional, Gómez, José María, additional, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, additional, González-Estévez, Miguel Ángel, additional, Heleno, Ruben, additional, Herrera, Jose M., additional, Hormaza, Jose I., additional, Iriondo, Jose M., additional, Kuhlmann, Michael, additional, Laiolo, Paola, additional, Lara-Romero, Carlos, additional, Lázaro, Amparo, additional, López-Angulo, Jesús, additional, López-Núñez, Francisco A., additional, Loureiro, João, additional, Magrach, Ainhoa, additional, Martínez-López, Vicente, additional, Martínez-Núñez, Carlos, additional, Michez, Denis, additional, Miñarro, Marcos, additional, Montero-Castaño, Ana, additional, Moreira, Bruno, additional, Morente-López, Javier, additional, Noval Fonseca, Nacho, additional, Núñez Carbajal, Alejandro, additional, Obeso, José Ramón, additional, Ornosa, Concepción, additional, Ortiz-Sánchez, Francisco Javier, additional, Pareja Bonilla, Daniel, additional, Patiny, Sébastien, additional, Penado, Andreia, additional, Picanço, Ana, additional, Ploquin, Emilie F., additional, Rego, Carla, additional, Rey, Pedro J., additional, Ribas-Marquès, Elisa, additional, Roberts, Stuart P.M., additional, Rodriguez, Marta, additional, Rosas-Ramos, Natalia, additional, Sánchez, Ana M., additional, Santamaría, Silvia, additional, Tobajas, Estefanía, additional, Tormos, José, additional, Torres, Félix, additional, Trillo, Alejandro, additional, Valverde, Javier, additional, Vilà, Montserrat, additional, and Viñuela, Elisa, additional
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- 2022
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19. Habitat loss increases seasonal interaction rewiring in plant–pollinator networks
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Lázaro, Amparo, primary and Gómez‐Martínez, Carmelo, additional
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- 2022
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20. Supporting Information of the article Pollinator richness, pollination networks, and diet adjustment along local and landscape gradients of resource diversity
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Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, González-Estévez, Miguel A., Cursach, Joana, Lázaro, Amparo, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, González-Estévez, Miguel A., Cursach, Joana, and Lázaro, Amparo
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- 2022
21. Supporting Information for Habitat loss increases seasonal interaction rewiring in plant-pollinator networks
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Lázaro, Amparo, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, Lázaro, Amparo, and Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo
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- 2022
22. Pollinator richness, pollination networks, and diet adjustment along local and landscape gradients of resource diversity
- Author
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Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), European Commission, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Universidad de Las Islas Baleares, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, González-Estévez, Miguel A., Cursach, Joana, Lázaro, Amparo, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), European Commission, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Universidad de Las Islas Baleares, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, González-Estévez, Miguel A., Cursach, Joana, and Lázaro, Amparo
- Abstract
Loss of habitats and native species, introduction of invasive species, and changing climate regimes lead to the homogenization of landscapes and communities, affecting the availability of habitats and resources for economically important guilds, such as pollinators. Understanding how pollinators and their interactions vary along resource diversity gradients at different scales may help to determine their adaptability to the current diversity loss related to global change. We used data on 20 plant–pollinator communities along gradients of flower richness (local diversity) and landscape heterogeneity (landscape diversity) to understand how the diversity of resources at local and landscape scales affected (1) wild pollinator abundance and richness (accounting also for honey bee abundance), (2) the structure of plant–pollinator networks, (3) the proportion of actively selected interactions (those not occurring by neutral processes), and (4) pollinator diet breadth and species' specialization in networks. Wild pollinator abundance was higher overall in flower-rich and heterogeneous habitats, while wild pollinator richness increased with flower richness (more strongly for beetles and wild bees) and decreased with honeybee abundance. Network specialization (H′), modularity, and functional complementarity were all positively related to floral richness and landscape heterogeneity, indicating niche segregation as the diversity of resources increases at both scales. Flower richness also increased the proportion of actively selected interactions (especially for wild bees and flies), whereas landscape heterogeneity had a weak negative effect on this variable. Overall, network-level metrics responded to larger landscape scales than pollinator-level metrics did. Higher floral richness resulted in a wider taxonomic and functional diet for all the study guilds, while functional diet increased mainly for beetles. Despite this, specialization in networks (d′) increased with flower ric
- Published
- 2022
23. Habitat loss increases seasonal interaction rewiring in plant-pollinator networks
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Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), European Commission, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Universidad de Las Islas Baleares, Lázaro, Amparo, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), European Commission, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Universidad de Las Islas Baleares, Lázaro, Amparo, and Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo
- Abstract
Understanding the flexibility of interactions and network rewiring (i.e. reassembly of interactions due to partner-switching) is necessary to comprehend how future anthropogenic changes will affect interspecific interactions and the functioning of communities. A higher rewiring could be expected in more disturbed landscapes because these landscapes contain fewer and more generalist species with more homogeneous traits. We sampled pollination interactions in 20 wild Olea europaea communities along a disturbance gradient to evaluate the hypothesis that the loss of natural habitats increases seasonal (within-year) interaction rewiring in plant-pollinator communities, influencing their functional structure. For this, we particularly tested whether rewiring frequency was negatively related to the extent of natural habitats surrounding the communities, whether interaction rewiring influenced the static structure of networks (nestedness, network specialization –H2'–), and whether a high generalization (low specialization –d'–) and abundance of species in communities made them more prone to rewiring. We show that habitat loss increased seasonal interaction rewiring in networks. Changes in rewiring were related to changes in the cumulative static structure of pollination networks. Nestedness decreased and network specialization (H2') also tended to decrease as interaction rewiring increased, suggesting an indirect effect of habitat loss on the robustness of networks through their dynamics. As expected, generalist insect and plant species were more prone to rewiring. However, flower abundance had different effects on the rewiring probability of plant species depending on the extent of habitat loss, with abundant species rewiring more in disturbed communities and rewiring less in more natural communities. Likely, this is related to the context-dependent foraging behaviour of pollinators, which may switch to more abundant species if the cost of searching for trait-matching reso
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- 2022
24. Base de datos de abejas ibéricas
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Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Portugal), European Commission, Bartomeus, Ignasi, Lanuza, José B., Wood, Thomas J., Carvalheiro, Luísa G., Molina, Francisco P., Collado, Miguel Ángel, Aguado-Martín, Luis Óscar, Alomar, David, Álvarez-Fidalgo, María Ángeles, Álvarez-Fidalgo, María Pilar, Arista, Montserrat, Arroyo-Correa, Blanca, Asís, Josep D., Azpiazu, Celeste, Baños-Picón, Laura, Beja, Pedro, Boieiro, Mário, Borges, Paulo A. V., González Bornay, Guillermo, Carvalho, Rafael, Casimiro-Soriguer, Ramón, Castro, Sílvia, Costa, Joana, Cross, Ian, Rúa, Pilar de la, Pablos, Luis Miguel de, Paz, Víctor de, Díaz-Calafat, Joan, Ferrero, Victoria, Gaspar, Hugo, Ghisbain, Guillaume, Gómez, José M., Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, González-Estévez, Miguel A., Heleno, Rubén H., Herrera, José M., Hormaza Urroz, José Ignacio, Iriondo, José M., Kuhlmann, Michael, Laiolo, Paola, Lara-Romero, Carlos, Lázaro, Amparo, López-Angulo, Jesús, López-Núñez, Francisco Alejandro, Loureiro, João, Magrach, Ainhoa, Martínez López, Vicente, Martínez Núñez, Carlos, Michez, Denis, Miñarro, Marcos, Montero-Castaño, Ana, Moreira, Bruno, Morente-López, Javier, Noval-Fonseca, Ignacio, Núñez Carvajal, Alejandro, Obeso Suárez, José Ramón, Ornosa, Concepción, Ortíz-Sánchez, F. Javier, Pareja Bonilla, Daniel, Patiny, Sébastien, Penado, Andreia, Picanço, Ana, Ploquin, Emilie F., Rasmont, Pierre, Rego, Carla, Rey, Pedro J., Ribas-Marquès, Elisa, Roberts, Stuart P. M., Rodríguez, Marta, Rosas-Ramos, Natalia, Sánchez, Ana M., Santamaría, Silvia, Tobajas, Estefanía, Tormos, José, Torres, Félix, Trillo, Alejandro, Valverde, Javier, Vilà, Montserrat, Viñuela, Elisa, Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (Portugal), European Commission, Bartomeus, Ignasi, Lanuza, José B., Wood, Thomas J., Carvalheiro, Luísa G., Molina, Francisco P., Collado, Miguel Ángel, Aguado-Martín, Luis Óscar, Alomar, David, Álvarez-Fidalgo, María Ángeles, Álvarez-Fidalgo, María Pilar, Arista, Montserrat, Arroyo-Correa, Blanca, Asís, Josep D., Azpiazu, Celeste, Baños-Picón, Laura, Beja, Pedro, Boieiro, Mário, Borges, Paulo A. V., González Bornay, Guillermo, Carvalho, Rafael, Casimiro-Soriguer, Ramón, Castro, Sílvia, Costa, Joana, Cross, Ian, Rúa, Pilar de la, Pablos, Luis Miguel de, Paz, Víctor de, Díaz-Calafat, Joan, Ferrero, Victoria, Gaspar, Hugo, Ghisbain, Guillaume, Gómez, José M., Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, González-Estévez, Miguel A., Heleno, Rubén H., Herrera, José M., Hormaza Urroz, José Ignacio, Iriondo, José M., Kuhlmann, Michael, Laiolo, Paola, Lara-Romero, Carlos, Lázaro, Amparo, López-Angulo, Jesús, López-Núñez, Francisco Alejandro, Loureiro, João, Magrach, Ainhoa, Martínez López, Vicente, Martínez Núñez, Carlos, Michez, Denis, Miñarro, Marcos, Montero-Castaño, Ana, Moreira, Bruno, Morente-López, Javier, Noval-Fonseca, Ignacio, Núñez Carvajal, Alejandro, Obeso Suárez, José Ramón, Ornosa, Concepción, Ortíz-Sánchez, F. Javier, Pareja Bonilla, Daniel, Patiny, Sébastien, Penado, Andreia, Picanço, Ana, Ploquin, Emilie F., Rasmont, Pierre, Rego, Carla, Rey, Pedro J., Ribas-Marquès, Elisa, Roberts, Stuart P. M., Rodríguez, Marta, Rosas-Ramos, Natalia, Sánchez, Ana M., Santamaría, Silvia, Tobajas, Estefanía, Tormos, José, Torres, Félix, Trillo, Alejandro, Valverde, Javier, Vilà, Montserrat, and Viñuela, Elisa
- Abstract
[ES] Las abejas son un grupo extremadamente diverso con más de 1000 especies descritas en la península ibérica. Además, son excelentes polinizadores y aportan numerosos servicios ecosistémicos fundamentales para la mayoría de ecosistemas terrestres. Debido a los diversos cambios ambientales inducidos por el ser humano, existen evidencias del declive de algunas de sus poblaciones para ciertas especies. Sin embargo, conocemos muy poco del estado de conservación de la mayoría de especies y de muchas de ellas ignoramos cuál es su distribución en la península ibérica. En este trabajo presentamos un esfuerzo colaborativo para crear una base de datos de ocurrencias de abejas que abarca la península ibérica e islas Baleares que permitirá resolver cuestiones como la distribución de las diferentes especies, preferencia de hábitat, fenología o tendencias históricas. En su versión actual, esta base de datos contiene un total de 87 684 registros de 923 especies recolectados entre 1830 y 2022, de los cuales un 87% presentan información georreferenciada. Para cada registro se incluye información relativa a la localidad de muestreo (89%), identificador y colector de la especie (64%), fecha de captura (54%) y planta donde se recolectó (20%). Creemos que esta base de datos es el punto de partida para conocer y conservar mejor la biodiversidad de abejas en la península ibérica e Islas Baleares, [EN] Bees are a diverse group with more than 1000 species known from the Iberian Peninsula. They have increasingly received special attention due to their important role as pollinators and providers of ecosystem services. In addition, various rapid human-induced environmental changes are leading to the decline of some of its populations. However, we know very little about the conservation status of most species and for many species, we hardly know their true distributions across the Iberian Peninsula. Here, we present a collaborative effort to collate and curate a database of Iberian bee occurrences to answer questions about their distribution, habitat preference, phenology, or historical trends. In total we have accumulated 87 684 records from the Iberian Peninsula and the Balearic Islands of 923 different species with 87% of georeferenced records collected between 1830 and 2022. In addition, each record has associated information such as the sampling location (89%), collector and person who identified the species (64%), date of the capture (54%) and plant species where the bees were captured (20%). We believe that this database is the starting point to better understand and conserve bee biodiversity in the Iberian Peninsula.
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- 2022
25. Portfolio effect and asynchrony as drivers of stability in plant–pollinator communities along a gradient of landscape heterogeneity
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Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), European Commission, Lázaro, Amparo, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, González-Estévez, Miguel A., Hidalgo, Manuel, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), European Commission, Lázaro, Amparo, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, González-Estévez, Miguel A., and Hidalgo, Manuel
- Abstract
Understanding how pollination services can be maintained in increasingly anthropogenic landscapes is a current challenge for basic and applied ecology. The stability of plant–pollinator communities might increase in heterogeneous landscapes with a high diversity of species and alternative habitats, both through larger independent fluctuations of populations (portfolio effect) and increased species asynchrony. However, how the drivers of stability (portfolio effect and synchrony) vary along land-use gradients remains largely unknown. Using independent samplings for plants, pollinators and their interactions in Mediterranean communities along a gradient of landscape heterogeneity, we assessed the relationships between within-year stability and its drivers, and between the drivers of stability, landscape heterogeneity and species diversity. In addition, we evaluated the relationship between the stability of plant–pollinator interactions (temporal mean/SD of pairwise interactions) and the structure of mutualistic networks (modularity, nestedness, connectance). As expected, stability increased with larger portfolio effects and asynchronies. Interaction stability was positively related to pollinator stability, but not to plant stability. Landscape evenness increased the stability of plants, pollinators and their interactions, through increased portfolio effects. However, for plants and pollinators, the effect was detected at a smaller scale (1-km) than for interactions (2-km); and for pollinators and interactions, the effect was only evident from medium-to-high levels of landscape evenness. Temporal synchrony of species/pairwise interactions was an important driver of stability, tightly linked to species/interaction diversity. More asynchronous communities showed a larger portfolio effect and were also those with higher species evenness for all plants, pollinators and their interactions; while synchrony was also weakly positively related to species richness for plants. In
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- 2022
26. Portfolio effect and asynchrony as drivers of stability in plant–pollinator communities along a gradient of landscape heterogeneity
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Lázaro, Amparo, primary, Gómez‐Martínez, Carmelo, additional, González‐Estévez, Miguel A., additional, and Hidalgo, Manuel, additional
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- 2022
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27. Impacts of beekeeping on wild bee diversity and pollination networks in the Aegean Archipelago
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Lázaro, Amparo, primary, Müller, Andreas, additional, Ebmer, Andreas W., additional, Dathe, Holger H., additional, Scheuchl, Erwin, additional, Schwarz, Maximilian, additional, Risch, Stephan, additional, Pauly, Alain, additional, Devalez, Jelle, additional, Tscheulin, Thomas, additional, Gómez‐Martínez, Carmelo, additional, Papas, Evangelos, additional, Pickering, John, additional, Waser, Nickolas M., additional, and Petanidou, Theodora, additional
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- 2021
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28. Impacts of beekeeping on wild bee diversity and pollination networks in the Aegean Archipelago
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European Commission, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Universidad de Las Islas Baleares, Greek Government, Lázaro, Amparo, Müller, Andreas, Ebmer, Andreas W., Dathe, Holger H., Scheuchl, Erwin, Schwarz, Maximilian, Risch, Stephan, Pauly, Alain, Devalez, Jelle, Tscheulin, Thomas, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, Papas, Evangelos, Pickering, John, Waser, Nickolas M., Petanidou, Theodora, European Commission, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Universidad de Las Islas Baleares, Greek Government, Lázaro, Amparo, Müller, Andreas, Ebmer, Andreas W., Dathe, Holger H., Scheuchl, Erwin, Schwarz, Maximilian, Risch, Stephan, Pauly, Alain, Devalez, Jelle, Tscheulin, Thomas, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, Papas, Evangelos, Pickering, John, Waser, Nickolas M., and Petanidou, Theodora
- Abstract
Maintaining the diversity of wild bees is a priority for preserving ecosystem function and promoting stability and productivity of agroecosystems. However, wild bee communities face many threats and beekeeping could be one of them, because honey bees may have a strong potential to outcompete wild pollinators when placed at high densities. Yet, we still know little about how beekeeping intensity affects wild bee diversity and their pollinator interactions. Here, we explore how honey bee density relates to wild bee diversity and the structure of their pollination networks in 41 sites on 13 Cycladic Islands (Greece) with similar landscapes but differing in beekeeping intensity. Our large-scale study shows that increasing honey bee visitation rate had a negative effect on wild bee species richness and abundance, although the latter effect was relatively weak compared to the effect of other landscape variables. Competition for flowering resources (as indicated by a resource sharing index) increased with the abundance of honey bees, but the effect was more moderate for wild bees in family Apidae than for bees in other families, suggesting a stronger niche segregation in Apidae in response to honey bees. Honey bees also influenced the structure of wild bee pollination networks indirectly, through changes in wild bee richness. Low richness of wild bees in sites with high honey bee abundance resulted in wild bee networks with fewer links and lower linkage density. Our results warn against beekeeping intensification in these islands and similar hotspots of bee diversity, and shed light on how benefits to pollination services of introducing honey bees may be counterbalanced by detriments to wild bees and their ecosystem services.
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- 2021
29. The role of landscape composition and heterogeneity on the taxonomical and functional diversity of Mediterranean plant communities in agricultural landscapes
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Cursach, Joana, primary, Rita, Juan, additional, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, additional, Cardona, Carles, additional, Capó, Miquel, additional, and Lázaro, Amparo, additional
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- 2020
- Full Text
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30. Generation of one iPSC line (IMEDEAi007-A) by Sendai Virus transduction of PBMCs from a Psoriasis donor
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Vallejo-Diez, Sara, primary, Fleischer, Aarne, additional, María Martín-Fernández, José, additional, Sánchez-Gilabert, Almudena, additional, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, additional, Castresana, Mónica, additional, and Bachiller, Daniel, additional
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- 2020
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31. The role of landscape composition and heterogeneity on the taxonomical and functional diversity of Mediterranean plant communities in agricultural landscapes
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Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), European Commission, Cursach, Joana, Rita, Juan, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, Cardona, Carles, Capó, Miquel, Lázaro, Amparo, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), European Commission, Cursach, Joana, Rita, Juan, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, Cardona, Carles, Capó, Miquel, and Lázaro, Amparo
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The expansion of agriculture is a major driver of biodiversity loss worldwide, through changes generated in the landscape. Despite this, very little is still known about the complex relationships between landscape composition and heterogeneity and plant taxonomical and functional diversity in Mediterranean ecosystems that have been extensively managed during millennia. Although according to the Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis (IDH) plant richness might peak at intermediate disturbance levels, functional diversity might increase with landscape heterogeneity and decrease with the intensity of disturbance. Here, we evaluated the associations of landscape composition (percentage of crops) and heterogeneity (diversity of land-cover classes) with plant taxonomical diversity (richness, diversity, evenness), local contribution to beta diversity, and functional diversity (functional richness, evenness, divergence and dispersion) in 20 wild Olea europaea communities appearing within agricultural landscapes of Mallorca Island (Western Mediterranean Basin). In accordance with the IDH, we found that overall plant richness peaked at intermediate levels of crops in the landscape, whereas plant evenness showed the opposite pattern, because richness peak was mainly related to an increase in scarce ruderal species. Plant communities surrounded by very heterogeneous landscapes were those contributing the most to beta diversity and showing the highest functional richness and evenness, likely because diverse landscapes favour the colonization of new species and traits into the communities. In addition, landscape heterogeneity decreased functional divergence (i.e., increased trait overlap of dominant species) which may enhance community resilience against disturbances through a higher functional redundancy. However, a large extent of agriculture in the landscape might reduce such resilience, as this disturbance acted as an environmental filter that decreased functional dispersion (i.
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- 2020
32. Generation of one iPSC line (IMEDEAi007-A) by Sendai Virus transduction of PBMCs from a Psoriasis donor
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Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Eusko Jaurlaritza, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Vallejo-Díez, Sara, Fleischer, Aarne, Martín-Fernández, Jose María, Sánchez-Gilabert, Almudena, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, Castresana, Mónica, Bachiller, Daniel, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Eusko Jaurlaritza, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España), Vallejo-Díez, Sara, Fleischer, Aarne, Martín-Fernández, Jose María, Sánchez-Gilabert, Almudena, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, Castresana, Mónica, and Bachiller, Daniel
- Abstract
Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease that speeds up the life cycle of skin cells, forming scales and red patches that are itchy and sometimes painful. It is a complex disease of autoimmune origin and genetic predisposition with more than 10 different loci associated. Here we described the production of an iPSC line generated by Sendai Virus (Klf4, Oct3/4, Sox2 and c-Myc) reprogramming of Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMCs) from a Psoriasis patient. The iPSC line generated has normal 46XY karyotype, is free of SeV genome and transgenes insertions, express high levels of pluripotency markers and can differentiate into all three germ layers.
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- 2020
33. Forest fragmentation modifies the composition of bumblebee communities and modulates their trophic and competitive interactions for pollination
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Norwegian Research Council, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), European Commission, Govern de les Illes Balears, Fundación la Caixa, Fundación Caja Navarra, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, T. O. Aase, Anne Lene, Totland, Orjan, Rodríguez-Pérez, Javier, Birkemoe, Tone, Sverdrup-Thygeson, Anne, Lázaro, Amparo, Norwegian Research Council, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), European Commission, Govern de les Illes Balears, Fundación la Caixa, Fundación Caja Navarra, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, T. O. Aase, Anne Lene, Totland, Orjan, Rodríguez-Pérez, Javier, Birkemoe, Tone, Sverdrup-Thygeson, Anne, and Lázaro, Amparo
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Understanding the effects of landscape fragmentation on global bumblebee declines requires going beyond estimates of abundance and richness and evaluating changes in community composition and trophic and competitive interactions. We studied the effects of forest fragmentation in a Scandinavian landscape that combines temperate forests and croplands. For that, we evaluated how forest fragmentation features (patch size, isolation and shape complexity, percentage of forest in the surroundings) as well as local flowering communities influenced bumblebee abundance, richness and community composition in 24 forest patches along a fragmentation gradient. In addition, we assessed the effect of fragmentation on bumblebee–plant network specialization (H2′), and potential inter- and intraspecific competition via shared plants. Patch isolation was associated with lower bumblebee abundance, whereas flower density was positively related to both bumblebee abundance and richness. Overall, forest fragmentation reduced the abundance of forest-specialists while increasing the abundance of open-habitat species. Patches with complex shapes and few flowers showed more generalized bumblebee–plant networks (i.e., fewer specific interactions). Patch shape complexity and the percentage of forest also modified inter- and intraspecific competitive interactions, with habitat generalists outcompeting forest specialists in fragmented areas. Understanding these mechanisms is necessary to anticipate to the impact of forest fragmentation on bumblebee decline.
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- 2020
34. Linking species-level network metrics to flower traits and plant fitness
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Govern de les Illes Balears, European Commission, Universidad de Las Islas Baleares, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Lázaro, Amparo, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, Alomar, David, González-Estévez, Miguel A., Traveset, Anna, Govern de les Illes Balears, European Commission, Universidad de Las Islas Baleares, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España), Lázaro, Amparo, Gómez-Martínez, Carmelo, Alomar, David, González-Estévez, Miguel A., and Traveset, Anna
- Abstract
Theoretical models indicate that the structure of plant–pollinator networks has important implications for the reproduction and survival of species. However, despite the growing information on the mechanisms underlying such a structure, it is still difficult to predict the functional consequences of species’ structural positions in these networks. From the plant perspective, species position and roles in pollination networks might be related to traits describing flower attractiveness, availability and dependence on pollinators. In turn, both network metrics and plant traits might influence plant species fitness. During two field seasons, we collected data from the 23 most abundant plant species in a rich coastal community, to evaluate the association between population and floral traits (floral abundance at population level and flowers per individual, flower shape and size, flowering length, nectar volume, pollinator dependence), species-level network metrics (linkage level, specialization –d′–, weighted closeness centrality, network roles related to modularity) and plant fitness (seeds/flower, seed weight). Flowering length, flower size, flower abundance and pollinator dependence were positively related to greater generalization, as measured by various indices. More abundant species and those with larger flowers showed higher linkage levels (i.e. higher number of pollinator species), whereas longer flowering periods were negatively related to d′ and positively related to closeness centrality and important roles in the network. Likewise, plants species more dependent on pollinators occupied more central positions in the network. Furthermore, centrality in the networks was significantly associated with plant fitness. Specifically, central species in the network produced more and heavier seeds than the others. However, other plant traits, such as flower size and pollinator dependence had additional direct effects on seed production. Synthesis. Our study highlights how
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- 2020
35. Linking species‐level network metrics to flower traits and plant fitness
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Lázaro, Amparo, primary, Gómez‐Martínez, Carmelo, additional, Alomar, David, additional, González‐Estévez, Miguel A., additional, and Traveset, Anna, additional
- Published
- 2020
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36. Dietary Factors Associated with Frailty in Old Adults: A Review of Nutritional Interventions to Prevent Frailty Development
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Hernández Morante, Juan José, primary, Gómez Martínez, Carmelo, additional, and Morillas-Ruiz, Juana María, additional
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- 2019
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37. REFLEXIONES ÉTICAS EN TORNO A LAS MEDIDAS TOMADAS EN LAS RESIDENCIAS DURANTE LA PANDEMIA.
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GÓMEZ MARTÍNEZ, CARMELO
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- 2020
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38. Análisis de las relaciones de los agentes sociales que operan en Residencias de personas mayores de la Región de Murcia
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Gómez Martínez, Carmelo Sergio, Echevarría Pérez, María Paloma, and Rivera Navarro, Jesús
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Grupos Sociales ,Antropología ,Etnografía y Etnología ,Política Social - Abstract
El envejecimiento poblacional es una realidad palpable y fácilmente observable. Si bien es cierto que el ritmo de envejecimiento poblacional es diverso en todo el planeta, en pocos años el segmento de los mayores de 65 años habrá alcanzado tasas nunca vistas antes en la historia del ser humano. Dentro de los diferentes dispositivos asistenciales de personas mayores aquel ubicado en las residencias cobra gran interés, a pesar de no ser muy extenso. Probablemente la escasez de bibliografía monográfica al respecto sea la causa de que hayan tantas aproximaciones conceptuales en torno del mundo residencial. El propósito de esta investigación ha sido la de analizar las relaciones de los agentes sociales que comprenden una residencia de ancianos en el contexto geográfico de la Región de Murcia. Estos agentes son los propios ancianos, sus familiares, los trabajadores de la residencia y los miembros de la organización que la conforma. Especial interés ha ocupado la naturaleza no lucrativa de las residencias estudiadas por la carga moralizante que estas expresan, a diferencia de las del sector público y las del sector empresarial mercantil. Siguiendo una metodología cualitativa, una etnografía, se han realizado 45 entrevistas semiestructuradas en 9 residencias de diversa forma administrativa (asociaciones, fundaciones y congregaciones religiosas). El trabajo de campo ha durado más de dos años con hallazgos muy interesantes. En el apartado de resultados y discusión han resaltado las apreciaciones acerca del propio concepto de residencia, el cual se ve impregnado de un halo de utilitarismo no tanto social como sanitario; así, para los ancianos que residen en estos centros el cariño y en buen trato son un gran objetivo a cubrir, mientras que la satisfacción de necesidades sanitarias queda en el terreno de los objetivos a conseguir por los familiares. Además, se ha observado especiales hallazgos en torno al término adaptación, el cual es utilizado indistintamente por pocos autores e incluso por la propia normativa legal, quedando puesto en duda su verdadero significado desde una perspectiva antropológica. Un aspecto importante de este trabajo de investigación ha sido la aprehensión de nuevos roles en la significación de la dinámica social diaria de la residencia, al menos entre los ancianos-residentes. Como marcas de estatus hemos podido constatar que el nivel cultural general, el nivel de estudios, la situación económica inmediata y el nivel de dependencia funcional van a situar a los ancianos que viven en las residencias estudiadas en un estrato más o menos alto o bajo respeto al resto. Como conclusiones podemos hemos podido destacar que el nivel de dependencia funcional y el cognitivo van a condicionar la forma de vida de todos los ancianos en la residencia. La residencia se ve trasformada por la demandas sociales pero en materia sanitaria, más que en la esfera social, lo cual pone hoy en día en entredicho la utilidad social de las mismas. El antiguo modelo de institución total impreso por Erving Goffmann como paradigma comparativo ha quedado desautorizado para tal fin ya que sus presupuestos teóricos son inaplicables a la realidad de las residencias estudiadas. Arte y Humanidades Ciencias Religiosas
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- 2016
39. Capitulo 15 - Principios bioéticos aplicados en el cuidado geriátrico
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Gómez Martínez, Carmelo and Martínez Cuervo, Fernando
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- 2012
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40. Capítulo 6 - Dolor en geriatría
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Martínez Cuervo, Fernando, Gómez Martínez, Carmelo, and Martínez Fernández, Ana María
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- 2012
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41. Sistemas de gestión de calidad en el área de enfermería; un antes y un después en el mundo de las residencias para personas mayores
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Andreo Muñoz, Pedro, Gómez Martínez, Carmelo, Carrasco González, Elena, Alguazas Martínez, Inmaculada, Andreo Muñoz, Francisca, Martínez Escámez, Inmaculada, Andreo Muñoz, Pedro, Gómez Martínez, Carmelo, Carrasco González, Elena, Alguazas Martínez, Inmaculada, Andreo Muñoz, Francisca, and Martínez Escámez, Inmaculada
- Published
- 2015
42. Análisis de la situación de maltrato sufrido fuera de la institución por personas mayores en el contexto de la atención residencial
- Author
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Gómez Martínez, Carmelo, primary, Carrasco Martínez, Elena, primary, Martínez Escámez, Inmaculada, primary, and Martínez Andreo, Pedro, primary
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Sistemas de gestión de calidad en el área de enfermería; un antes y un después en el mundo de las residencias para personas mayores
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Andreo Muñoz, Pedro, primary, Gómez Martínez, Carmelo, primary, Carrasco Martínez, Elena, primary, Martínez Escámez, Inmaculada, primary, Alguazas Martínez, Inmaculada, primary, and Andreo Muñoz, Francisca, primary
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Análisis de la situación de maltrato sufrido fuera de la institución por personas mayores en el contexto de la atención residencial
- Author
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Gómez Martínez, Carmelo, Carrasco Martínez, Elena, Martínez Escámez, Inmaculada, Andreo Muñoz, Pedro, Gómez Martínez, Carmelo, Carrasco Martínez, Elena, Martínez Escámez, Inmaculada, and Andreo Muñoz, Pedro
- Published
- 2014
45. Role of cervids and wild boar on the presence of tick-borne encephalitis virus in Sweden
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Gómez Martínez, Carmelo and Gómez Martínez, Carmelo
- Abstract
Roe deer have been historically considered the main large mammal host for Ixodes ricinus ticks and it has been related with the current distribution and prevalence of tick-borne encephalitis virus in Sweden, being the main arguments the roe deer population peak and a series of mild winters in the nineties. Nowadays, roe deer is again at levels similar to the seventies, but the virus incidence and ticks abundance are still increasing. The role that other large mammal species play on this could be important to understand the current situation. We analysed the presence or absence of tick-borne encephalitis virus antibodies on 259 individuals of fallow deer, moose, red deer, roe deer and wild boar from blood samples collected by hunters during the hunting seasons of 2010 to 2013 in 31 municipalities. The results show infection in individuals of the five species, with the highest prevalence in roe deer, followed by moose, red deer, wild boar and fallow deer. However, the differences among the species are not significant. We also found that the age and sex of the individuals affect the probability of infection. This study demonstrates that not only roe deer, but the other four species analysed are important hosts for tick-borne encephalitis virus and they should be taken into account in the management of the wild populations to prevent an increase of the human infections.
- Published
- 2014
46. Analysis of the Situation of Abuse Suffered Outside the Institution Older People in the Context of Residential Care
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Gómez Martínez, Carmelo, primary, Carrasco Martínez, Elena, additional, Martínez Escámez, Inmaculada, additional, and Muñoz, Pedro Andreo, additional
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- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Colaboradores
- Author
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Aragón Marín, Lorena, Buigues González, Cristina, Castanedo Pfeiffer, Cristina, Delgado, Abraham, Delgado Uría, Aroa, Díaz López, Juan Antonio, García García, María del Carmen, Gómez Martínez, Carmelo, Heredia Quijada, Lidia María, Julián Rochina, Iván, Martínez Fernández, Ana María, Martínez Cuervo, Fernando, Martínez Sabater, Antonio, Martínez Sellarés, Rosa, Mendoza Siles, María Luisa, Román Alonso, Elena, Ruiz Márquez, Trinidad, Sarabia Cobo, Carmen M., Torres Manrique, Blanca, and Vélez Vélez, Esperanza
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Análisis prospectivo de los factores implicados en el desarrollo de fragilidad de las personas mayores en residencias
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Eloina Valero Merlos, Hernández Morante, Juan José, and Gómez Martínez, Carmelo Sergio
- Subjects
Geriatría ,Envejecimiento de la Población ,Reumatología ,Rehabilitación Médica - Abstract
La población anciana cada vez es más longeva, siendo el grupo etario con mayor crecimiento el de ancianos >80 años. Con el envejecimiento se presentan muy frecuentemente enfermedades crónicas, deterioro cognitivo, funcional y/o nutricional que requieren una complejidad de cuidados, siendo el motivo fundamental de ingreso en residencias. Sin embargo, existen escasos estudios que evalúen la prevalencia de fragilidad en ancianos institucionalizados. En este sentido, es importante realizar un diagnóstico precoz de estas situaciones adversas, que pueden originar discapacidad o dependencia, manifestándose en la fragilidad del anciano. Objetivos: evaluar la influencia del ingreso en residencia de ancianos sobre la evolución de los factores que determinan la fragilidad. Validar un método de valoración de la fragilidad para estas personas, que pueda ser utilizado por todo el personal sanitario. Determinar la prevalencia de fragilidad atendiendo a los criterios del nuevo método. Analizar la evolución del estado nutricional, cognitivo y funcional de los residentes desde el ingreso hasta dos años después. Material y método: el presente estudio se dividió en dos fases, con metodologías diferentes para alcanzar sus objetivos. Fase 1: Diseño transversal a través de la metodología clásica para análisis relativo de la validez diagnóstica de un nuevo método. Se evaluó la prevalencia de fragilidad en 90 sujetos institucionalizados usando los criterios diagnósticos de Linda Fried y un nuevo método que evalúa, además, el estado cognitivo, funcional y nutricional. Se contrastaron los resultados obtenidos para estudiar su validez diagnóstica. Fase 2: Estudio de cohortes prospectivo longitudinal, analítico-observacional. Se aplica el nuevo método a una muestra de 90 sujetos en el momento del ingreso y se repite la evaluación cada 6 meses durante un periodo de dos años. Resultados. Fase 1: hubo una asociación elevada entre las puntuaciones de ambos criterios (r=0,568; p
- Published
- 2017
49. [Ethical reflections on the Measures Taken in Nursing Homes During Pandemic].
- Author
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Gómez Martínez C
- Subjects
- Aged, COVID-19, Coronavirus Infections prevention & control, Ethics Committees, Health Policy, Health Resources ethics, Health Resources supply & distribution, Humans, Information Dissemination, Pandemics prevention & control, Personhood, Pneumonia, Viral prevention & control, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Resource Allocation ethics, SARS-CoV-2, Social Justice, UNESCO, Vulnerable Populations, Betacoronavirus, Nursing Homes ethics, Pandemics ethics
- Abstract
The crisis in the health system caused by COVID-19 has left some important humanitarian deficits on how to care for the sick in their last days of life. The humanization of the dying process has been affected in three fundamental aspects, each of which constitutes a medical and ethical duty necessary. In this study, I analyze why dying accompanied, with the possibility of saying goodbye and receiving spiritual assistance, constitutes a specific triad of care and natural obligations that should not be overlooked - even in times of health crisis - if we do not want to see human dignity violated and violated some fundamental rights derived from it.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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