Carlos García-Estrada
Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Morelos
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Featured researches published by Carlos García-Estrada.
Journal of Medical Entomology | 2011
Juan B. Morales-Malacara; Helisama Colín-Martínez; Carlos García-Estrada
ABSTRACT Eudusbabekia paralepidoseta new species, was recorded on the Harts little fruit bat Enchistenes hartii (Thomas) in the southern part of Mexico. The female and male are described and illustrated. E. paralepidoseta n. sp. represents the 32nd species in the genus. From the 31 known species of Eudusbabekia known to infest phyllostomid and mormoopid bats, E. paralepidoseta n. sp. has some morphological features similar to Eudusbabekia lepidoseta Jameson, 1971, including shapes of almost all dorsal and ventral setae; the presence of a patch of supernumerary; mostly broad to thick, medium, and almost scale-like setae; and the absence of setae 2b. However, E. paralepidoseta n. sp. can be differentiated from E. lepidoseta, by the reduced number of supernumerary setae on the female venter (37–43). The close morphological and therefore evolutionary similarities between E. lepidoseta and E. paralepidoseta n. sp. suggest possible close evolutionary relationships between their hosts, Sturnira lilium (Geoffroyi and St.-Hilaire) and E. hartii, which belong to the monophyletic subfamily Stenodermatinae.
Journal of Medical Entomology | 2018
Helisama Colín-Martínez; Juan B. Morales-Malacara; Carlos García-Estrada
Abstract This is the first complete assessment of the ectoparasite fauna on phyllostomid bats in a shaded coffee plantation in Mexico. The study was carried out at Finca San Carlos, in the municipality of Tapachula, southeastern Chiapas, Mexico. The bats were captured over three consecutive nights every month, from December 2005 to November 2006, using four mist nets. We captured 192 phyllostomid bats, representing 18 species, upon which 1,971 ectoparasites, belonging to 11 families and 65 species, were found. We found that 160 of the 192 captured bats were hosts to ectoparasites, giving an infestation prevalence of 83.3%. Of the 65 ectoparasitic species, 14 were classified as monoxenous and 17 as stenoxenous. More ectoparasites were recorded in the dry season (n = 1,439) than the wet season (n = 532), and we recorded some families of ectoparasite on particular areas of the bat body. An ordination of bat species, based on their ectoparasitic species community structure, formed groups at the subfamily level or lower taxonomic categories. We suggest that the close ectoparasite-host relationships could be examined as an additional tool to elucidate the taxonomic relationships between the hosts.
Southwestern Naturalist | 2004
María de Lourdes Romero-Almaraz; Carlos García-Estrada; Cornelio Sánchez-Hernández
Abstract The population dynamics of Peromyscus levipes were studied in a deciduous forest in southeastern Morelos, Mexico. This study was performed at 2 sites, one having relatively little disturbance (low-disturbance site) and the other having extensive disturbance (high-disturbance site). Sampling was conducted from February 1991 through March 1992. At the low-disturbance site, the density in February 1991 was 39 individuals/ha. Although population size fluctuated temporally, it generally declined throughout the study until March 1992 (16 individuals/ha). Sex ratios of the populations were not significantly different. The reproductive pattern exhibited by P. levipes in the low-disturbance site was seasonally polyestrous. In the high-disturbance site, we caught only 6 individuals.
Journal of Medical Entomology | 2018
Juan B. Morales-Malacara; Linda Y M Aldana; Enrique Reyes-Novelo; Cenia E Almazán-Marín; Hugo Ruiz-Piña; Alan Cuxim-Koyoc; Álvaro Aguilar-Setién; Helisama Colín-Martínez; Carlos García-Estrada; Margarita Ojeda
Abstract A redescription, with a discussion of new features and illustrations, for all life stages is presented for the parasitic mite Periglischrus herrerai Machado-Allison associated with the common vampire bat Desmodus rotundus (Geoffoy), including a description of the heteromorphic female and the first description of its female deutonymph. In addition, the morphological variation of P. herrerai is evaluated by morphometric analysis of the adults, concluding that there is an evident geographic variation throughout the neotropics. This study was possible by using type material of P. herrerai from the Machado-Allison collection, and voucher specimens from other collections, and specimens from an extensive surveying of hematophagous bats in some localities of the Pacific and Atlantic versants, and central Mexico.
Acta zoológica mexicana | 2002
Carlos García-Estrada; Cornelio Sánchez-Hernández; D. F. México
Biotropica | 2012
Carlos García-Estrada; Anne Damon; Cornelio Sánchez-Hernández; Lorena Soto-Pinto; Guillermo Ibarra-Núñez
Acta zoológica mexicana | 2001
Cornelio Sánchez-Hernández; Ma. de Lourdes Romero-Almaraz; Helisama Colín-Martínez; Carlos García-Estrada
Experimental and Applied Acarology | 2016
Helisama Colín-Martínez; Carlos García-Estrada
Journal of Vector Ecology | 2018
Helisama Colín-Martínez; Carlos García-Estrada
Revista Eureka sobre Enseñanza y Divulgación de las Ciencias | 2016
Helisama Colín-Martínez; Carlos García-Estrada