Constantino Macías Garcia
National Autonomous University of Mexico
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Featured researches published by Constantino Macías Garcia.
Trends in Ecology and Evolution | 2012
Roger K. Butlin; Allan Debelle; Claudius Kerth; Rhonda R. Snook; Leo W. Beukeboom; Ruth F. Castillo Cajas; Wenwen Diao; Martine E. Maan; Silvia Paolucci; Franz J. Weissing; Louis Jacobus Mgn Van De Zande; Anneli Hoikkala; Elzemiek Geuverink; Jackson H. Jennings; Maaria Kankare; K. Emily Knott; Venera I. Tyukmaeva; Christos Zoumadakis; Michael G. Ritchie; Daniel Barker; Elina Immonen; Mark Kirkpatrick; Mohamed A. F. Noor; Constantino Macías Garcia; Thomas Schmitt; Menno Schilthuizen
Speciation has been a major focus of evolutionary biology research in recent years, with many important advances. However, some of the traditional organising principles of the subject area no longer provide a satisfactory framework, such as the classification of speciation mechanisms by geographical context into allopatric, parapatric and sympatry classes. Therefore, we have asked where speciation research should be directed in the coming years. Here, we present a distillation of questions about the mechanisms of speciation, the genetic basis of speciation and the relationship between speciation and diversity. Our list of topics is not exhaustive; rather we aim to promote discussion on research priorities and on the common themes that underlie disparate speciation processes.
Nature | 2005
Constantino Macías Garcia; Elvia Ramirez
Conventional models explaining extreme sexual ornaments propose that these reflect male genetic quality or are arbitrary results of genetic linkage between female preference and the ornament. The chase-away model emphasizes sexual conflict: male signals attract females because they exploit receiver biases. As males gain control of mating decisions, females may experience fitness costs through suboptimal mating rates or post-copulatory exploitation. Elaboration of male signals is expected if females increase their response threshold to resist such exploitation. If ornaments target otherwise adaptive biases such as feeding responses, selection on females might eventually separate sexual and non-sexual responses to the signal. Here we show that the terminal yellow band (TYB) of several Goodeinae species evokes both feeding and sexual responses; sexual responsiveness phylogenetically pre-dates the expression of the TYB in males and is comparable across taxa, yet feeding responsiveness decreases in species with more elaborated TYBs. Displaying a TYB is costly, and thus provides an example where a trait arose as a sensory trap but has evolved into an honest signal.
Biology Letters | 2011
Eira Bermûdez-Cuamatzin; Alejandro A. Ríos-Chelén; Diego Gil; Constantino Macías Garcia
Research has shown that bird songs are modified in different ways to deal with urban noise and promote signal transmission through noisy environments. Urban noise is composed of low frequencies, thus the observation that songs have a higher minimum frequency in noisy places suggests this is a way of avoiding noise masking. Most studies are correlative and there is as yet little experimental evidence that this is a short-term mechanism owing to individual plasticity. Here we experimentally test if house finches (Carpodacus mexicanus) can modulate the minimum frequency of their songs in response to different noise levels. We exposed singing males to three continuous treatments: low–high–low noise levels. We found a significant increase in minimum frequency from low to high and a decrement from high to low treatments. We also found that this was mostly achieved by modifying the frequency of the same low-frequency syllable types used in the different treatments. When different low-frequency syllables were used, those sung during the noisy condition were longer than the ones sang during the quiet condition. We conclude that house finches modify their songs in several ways in response to urban noise, thus providing evidence of a short-term acoustic adaptation.
Biology Letters | 2012
Monserrat Suárez-Rodríguez; Isabel López-Rull; Constantino Macías Garcia
Birds are known to respond to nest-dwelling parasites by altering behaviours. Some bird species, for example, bring fresh plants to the nest, which contain volatile compounds that repel parasites. There is evidence that some birds living in cities incorporate cigarette butts into their nests, but the effect (if any) of this behaviour remains unclear. Butts from smoked cigarettes retain substantial amounts of nicotine and other compounds that may also act as arthropod repellents. We provide the first evidence that smoked cigarette butts may function as a parasite repellent in urban bird nests. The amount of cellulose acetate from butts in nests of two widely distributed urban birds was negatively associated with the number of nest-dwelling parasites. Moreover, when parasites were attracted to heat traps containing smoked or non-smoked cigarette butts, fewer parasites reached the former, presumably due to the presence of nicotine. Because urbanization changes the abundance and type of resources upon which birds depend, including nesting materials and plants involved in self-medication, our results are consistent with the view that urbanization imposes new challenges on birds that are dealt with using adaptations evolved elsewhere.
Biology Letters | 2008
Alejandra Valero; Constantino Macías Garcia; Anne E. Magurran
Persistent courtship by male Trinidadian guppies (Poecilia reticulata) is costly for conspecific females. Since male guppies are known to attempt matings with other poeciliid females, we asked whether persistent courtship is also directed towards morphologically similar but phylogenetically distant females encountered following invasion. Skiffia bilineata is one of several endangered viviparous goodeids from Central México, whose remaining habitats are increasingly shared with invasive guppies. Experiments in which guppy sex ratios were manipulated to vary the proportion of heterospecific to conspecific females showed that male guppies courted and attempted forced copulations with S. bilineata females even when females of their own species were in excess. This behaviour places an additional, and previously unrecognized, burden on a group of endemic Mexican fishes already in risk of extinction.
Journal of Herpetology | 1988
Constantino Macías Garcia; Hugh Drummond
Stomach contents of Thamnophis eques at Lake Tecocomulco, Mexico, were recorded, and prey populations sampled. Results indicate significant differences in diet between large (>44.0 cm SVL) and small (<44.0 cm SVL) snakes. Large snakes fed mainly on aquatic vertebrates (fishes, frogs, and salamander larvae) and leeches, small snakes on earthworms and leeches. Lack of a correlation between snake size and size of prey (leech or earthworm) indicates that the ontogenetic change in diet is not just a result of predator growth progressively diminishing the availability and/or ability to handle small prey. There was also seasonal variation in prey which was associated with fluctuations in prey availability. Birth season seems associated with annelid abundance. Differences in local distribution of large and small snakes were found and may reflect differences in foraging patterns. Possible effects of allopatry on the diet of this population are discussed.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2008
Omar Arellano-Aguilar; Constantino Macías Garcia
Ornament magnitude often reflects a local balance between sexual selection and other sources of natural selection opposing their elaboration. Human activity may disrupt this balance if it modifies the costs of producing, maintaining or displaying the ornaments. When costs are increased, a shortage of acceptable partners may ensue, with consequences commensurate with how stringent (and effective) the process of mate choice is. Here, we show that the expression of ornaments in the viviparous amarillo fish (Girardinichthys multiradiatus) is influenced by embryonic exposure to low concentrations of an organophosphorus insecticide. Male ornamental fin size, dimorphic yellow coloration and display rates were all compromised in exposed fish, but unaffected in their paternal half-sibling controls and in their sisters (morphology and colour). Exposure resulted in smaller fish of both sexes, thus the differential effect by sex was restricted to attributes such as fin size only above the naturally selected magnitude shown by females. Father phenotype predicted offspring morphology of controls, but not of exposed males, which were discriminated against by both control and exposed females. Since stringent female mate choice can result in females refusing to mate with suboptimal mates, this sub-lethal developmental effect can reduce the effective population size of amarillo fish populations.
Animal Behaviour | 2012
Luisa Amo; Isabel López-Rull; Iluminada Pagán; Constantino Macías Garcia
There is increasing evidence that birds use chemical cues in different contexts, and this is changing the traditional view that birds are the only largely olfaction-free vertebrates. We performed a choice experiment to examine whether male house finches exhibit any preferences for the sex of conspecifics when only their chemical cues are available. When exposed during the breeding season to the scent of a male and a female, males appeared to respond indiscriminately to both odours. However, when we analysed a posteriori the choices of males in relation to their relative quality, males with worse quality than scent donor males avoided the male-scented area, whereas males with better quality moved towards the male-scented area. Our results suggest that in the context of mate choice/competition for mates, house finches may obtain information via olfaction to assess the quality of rival males.
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | 2013
Alejandro A. Ríos-Chelén; Esmeralda Quirós-Guerrero; Diego Gil; Constantino Macías Garcia
In noisy conditions, several avian species modulate their songs in amplitude and in the temporal or frequency domains, presumably to improve communication. Most studies on how passerine birds perform such adjustments have been carried out in oscines, a group well known for the importance of learning in the development of their songs. On the other hand, suboscines, in which learning appears to have little influence on the development of their songs, have been largely neglected. We evaluated song adjustment to noise in the vermilion flycatcher (Pyrocephalus rubinus), a suboscine bird. We conducted song recordings and noise measurements at several territories within Mexico City during the length of the dawn chorus. Males living in noisier places sang long songs, while those males inhabiting quieter places sang both short and long songs. We also found evidence of individual song plasticity, as males sang less versatile songs (i.e., songs with more introductory elements) later in the morning when noise levels were higher. This individual shift in song seems to be more associated to time of the day rather than to the observed rise in noise. However, we cannot discard an effect of noise, which should be evaluated with an experiment. We discuss our results in the context of other studies with oscine passerines and other taxa and consider implications for signaling in intra- and intersexual contexts.
Copeia | 1994
Constantino Macías Garcia
. 1992. The evolution of life histories. Oxford Univ. Press, New York, New York. TAYLOR, D. 1984. Management implications of an adult female alligator telemetry study. Proc. Annual Conf. S.E. Assoc. Fish and Wildl. Agencies 38: 222-227. , N. KINLER, AND G. LINSCOMBE. 1991. Female alligator reproduction and associated population estimates. J. Wildl. Manage. 55:682-688. THORBJARNARSON, J. 1988. The status and ecology of the American crocodile in Haiti. Bull. Florida State Museum Biol. Sci. 33:1-86.