Carmen E. Sáinz-Cantero
University of Granada
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Featured researches published by Carmen E. Sáinz-Cantero.
Hydrobiologia | 2009
José Manuel Poquet; Javier Alba-Tercedor; Tura Puntí; María del Mar Sánchez-Montoya; Santiago Robles; Maruxa Álvarez; Carmen Zamora-Muñoz; Carmen E. Sáinz-Cantero; M. R. Vidal-Abarca; María Luisa Suárez; Manuel Toro; Ana Pujante; Maria Rieradevall; Narcís Prat
In Spain, a national project known as GUADALMED, focusing on Mediterranean streams, has been carried out from 1998 to 2005 to implement the European water framework directive (WFD) requirements. One of the main objectives of the second phase of the project (2002–2005) was to develop a predictive system for the Spanish Mediterranean aquatic macroinvertebrate communities. A combined-season (spring, summer, and autumn) predictive model was developed by using the latest improvements on the selection of best predictor variables. Overall model performance measures were used to select the best discriminant function (DF) models, and also to evaluate their biases and precision. The final predictive model was based on the best five DF models. Each one of these models involved eight environmental variables. Final observed (O), expected (E), and O/E values for the number of macroinvertebrate families (NFAM) and two biotic indices (IBMWP and IASPT) were calculated by averaging their values, previously weighted by the quality of each DF model. Regression analyses among the final O and E values for the calibration dataset showed a high proximity to the ideal theoretical model, where the final E values explained 73–84% of the variation present in the macroinvertebrate communities of the Spanish Mediterranean watercourses. The ANOVA performed among the reference (calibration and validation) and test datasets showed clear differences for the O/E values. Finally, the assessments carried out by the predictive model were sensitive to anthropogenic pressure present in the study area and allowed the definition of five ecological status classes according to the WFD requirements.
Aquatic Insects | 1989
Carmen E. Sáinz-Cantero; Javier Alba-Tercedor
The male of Hydraena (Haenydra) tatii sp.n. is described and illustrated. It is known from three localities in the Sierra Nevada, Granada (southern Spain). Ecological notes are provided.
Molecular Ecology | 2017
Cesc Múrria; Núria Bonada; Mark Vellend; Carmen Zamora-Muñoz; Javier Alba-Tercedor; Carmen E. Sáinz-Cantero; Josefina Garrido; Raúl Acosta; Majida El Alami; José Barquín; Tomáš Derka; Mario Álvarez-Cabria; Marta Sáinz-Bariáin; Ana Filipa Filipe; Alfried P. Vogler
Community assembly is determined by a combination of historical events and contemporary processes that are difficult to disentangle, but eco‐evolutionary mechanisms may be uncovered by the joint analysis of species and genetic diversity across multiple sites. Mountain streams across Europe harbour highly diverse macroinvertebrate communities whose composition and turnover (replacement of taxa) among sites and regions remain poorly known. We studied whole‐community biodiversity within and among six mountain regions along a latitudinal transect from Morocco to Scandinavia at three levels of taxonomic hierarchy: genus, species and haplotypes. Using DNA barcoding of four insect families (>3100 individuals, 118 species) across 62 streams, we found that measures of local and regional diversity and intraregional turnover generally declined slightly towards northern latitudes. However, at all hierarchical levels we found complete (haplotype) or high (species, genus) turnover among regions (and even among sites within regions), which counters the expectations of Pleistocene postglacial northward expansion from southern refugia. Species distributions were mostly correlated with environmental conditions, suggesting a strong role of lineage‐ or species‐specific traits in determining local and latitudinal community composition, lineage diversification and phylogenetic community structure (e.g., loss of Coleoptera, but not Ephemeroptera, at northern sites). High intraspecific genetic structure within regions, even in northernmost sites, reflects species‐specific dispersal and demographic histories and indicates postglacial migration from geographically scattered refugia, rather than from only southern areas. Overall, patterns were not strongly concordant across hierarchical levels, but consistent with the overriding influence of environmental factors determining community composition at the species and genus levels.
Aquatic Insects | 1993
Carmen E. Sáinz-Cantero
A new species in the genus Hydraena Kugelann, 1794 from the south of the Iberian Peninsula is described and illustrated. The new species is closely related to Hydraena (Hydraena) bolivari Orchymont, 1936. Notes on the ecology and distribution are offered.
Water Research | 1995
Carmen Zamora-Muñoz; Carmen E. Sáinz-Cantero; Antonino Sánchez-Ortega; Javier Alba-Tercedor
Zoologica baetica | 1992
Carmen E. Sáinz-Cantero; Nard Bennas; Francisco Javier Alba Tercedor
International Review of Hydrobiology | 2012
Manuel Jesús López-Rodríguez; Ignacio Peralta-Maraver; Brunella Gaetani; Carmen E. Sáinz-Cantero; Romolo Fochetti; J. Manuel Tierno de Figueroa
Aquatic Sciences | 2016
Marta Sáinz-Bariáin; Carmen Zamora-Muñoz; Juan J. Soler; Núria Bonada; Carmen E. Sáinz-Cantero; Javier Alba-Tercedor
Memorie della Società Entomologica Italiana | 2006
Nard Bennas; Carmen E. Sáinz-Cantero
Zoologica baetica | 2001
Carmen E. Sáinz-Cantero; A. Ouarour; Nard Bennas