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510.0.#.a: Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (CONACyT), Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), Sistema Regional de Información en Línea para Revistas Científicas de América Latina, el Caribe, España y Portugal (Latindex), Scientific Electronic Library Online (SciELO), SCOPUS, Web Of Science (WoS)

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336.#.#.a: Artículo

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351.#.#.b: Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad

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856.4.0.u: http://www.revista.ib.unam.mx/index.php/bio/article/view/744/684

100.1.#.a: Ortiz Pulido, Raúl; Díaz Valenzuela, Román

524.#.#.a: Ortiz Pulido, Raúl, et al. (2011). Effects of a snowstorm event on the interactions between plants and hummingbirds: fast recovery of spatio-temporal patterns. Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad; Vol. 82, núm. 4, 2011: diciembre. Recuperado de https://repositorio.unam.mx/contenidos/23558

245.1.0.a: Effects of a snowstorm event on the interactions between plants and hummingbirds: fast recovery of spatio-temporal patterns

502.#.#.c: Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

561.1.#.a: Instituto de Biología, UNAM

264.#.0.c: 2011

264.#.1.c: 2011-12-08

653.#.#.a: bird pollinated flowers; global climate change; hummingbirds; ornithophylous plant species; snowstorm effect; sudden changes in the average state of the time

506.1.#.a: La titularidad de los derechos patrimoniales de esta obra pertenece a las instituciones editoras. Su uso se rige por una licencia Creative Commons BY-NC-ND 4.0 Internacional, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode.es, fecha de asignación de la licencia 2011-12-08, para un uso diferente consultar al responsable jurídico del repositorio por medio de falvarez@ib.unam.mx

884.#.#.k: http://www.revista.ib.unam.mx/index.php/bio/article/view/744

041.#.7.h: eng

520.3.#.a: The global climatic change could cause, in some places, appearance of meteorological phenomena considered rare. If we understand the effect of these phenomena on birds we can understand how birds respond to weather changes. We report here the effect of a severe snowfall on hummingbird activity, flower abundance and hummingbird-plant interaction in a temperate forest of central Mexico. During our study we registered 1 hummingbird species (Hylocharis leucotis) and 7 plant species (Fuchsia thymifolia, F. microphyla, Salvia amarissima, S. elegants, Cestrum roseum, Penstemon campanulatus and Lonicera mexicana). Before the sudden climatic phenomena we registered 66 records of hummingbirds, 8 700 flowers, and 6 hummingbird visits to flowers. During the phenomena, there were zero hummingbird records, 160 flowers and zero visits. A month after the event there were 67 hummingbirds records, 1 825 flowers and 13 visits. Hummingbird activity recovered rapidly after the snowstorm, but 6 of 7 plants species lost all their flowers, except for L. mexicana, which received all hummingbird visits a month after the climatic event.

773.1.#.t: Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad; Vol. 82, núm. 4 (2011): diciembre

773.1.#.o: http://www.revista.ib.unam.mx/index.php/bio

022.#.#.a: 2007-8706; 1870-3453

310.#.#.a: Trimestral

264.#.1.b: Instituto de Biología, UNAM

758.#.#.1: http://www.revista.ib.unam.mx/index.php/bio

harvesting_date: 2020-09-23 00:00:00.0

856.#.0.q: application/pdf

245.1.0.b: Efecto de una tormenta de nieve sobre la interacción colibrí-planta: los patrones espacio-temporales se recobran rápido

last_modified: 2021-02-16 17:50:00.000

license_url: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode.es

license_type: by-nc-nd

_deleted_conflicts: 2-e8da04f5cad54ae79729b520ba4a34d0

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Artículo

Effects of a snowstorm event on the interactions between plants and hummingbirds: fast recovery of spatio-temporal patterns

Ortiz Pulido, Raúl; Díaz Valenzuela, Román

Instituto de Biología, UNAM, publicado en Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad, y cosechado de Revistas UNAM

Licencia de uso

Procedencia del contenido

Cita

Ortiz Pulido, Raúl, et al. (2011). Effects of a snowstorm event on the interactions between plants and hummingbirds: fast recovery of spatio-temporal patterns. Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad; Vol. 82, núm. 4, 2011: diciembre. Recuperado de https://repositorio.unam.mx/contenidos/23558

Descripción del recurso

Autor(es)
Ortiz Pulido, Raúl; Díaz Valenzuela, Román
Tipo
Artículo de Investigación
Área del conocimiento
Biología y Química
Título
Effects of a snowstorm event on the interactions between plants and hummingbirds: fast recovery of spatio-temporal patterns
Fecha
2011-12-08
Resumen
The global climatic change could cause, in some places, appearance of meteorological phenomena considered rare. If we understand the effect of these phenomena on birds we can understand how birds respond to weather changes. We report here the effect of a severe snowfall on hummingbird activity, flower abundance and hummingbird-plant interaction in a temperate forest of central Mexico. During our study we registered 1 hummingbird species (Hylocharis leucotis) and 7 plant species (Fuchsia thymifolia, F. microphyla, Salvia amarissima, S. elegants, Cestrum roseum, Penstemon campanulatus and Lonicera mexicana). Before the sudden climatic phenomena we registered 66 records of hummingbirds, 8 700 flowers, and 6 hummingbird visits to flowers. During the phenomena, there were zero hummingbird records, 160 flowers and zero visits. A month after the event there were 67 hummingbirds records, 1 825 flowers and 13 visits. Hummingbird activity recovered rapidly after the snowstorm, but 6 of 7 plants species lost all their flowers, except for L. mexicana, which received all hummingbird visits a month after the climatic event.
Tema
bird pollinated flowers; global climate change; hummingbirds; ornithophylous plant species; snowstorm effect; sudden changes in the average state of the time
Idioma
eng
ISSN
2007-8706; 1870-3453

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