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Featured researches published by Eloy Solano.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2007

Ecological niche modeling and geographic distribution of the genus Polianthes L. (Agavaceae) in Mexico: using niche modeling to improve assessments of risk status

Eloy Solano; T. Patricia Feria

The genus Polianthes (Agavaceae) is endemic to Mexico and is important at the scientific, economical, and cultural level since prehispanic times. Habitat destruction is one of the main factors affecting populations of Polianthes species, yet little is known about the geographic distribution of this genus, and thus its vulnerability to habitat change. We compared three different approaches to measure the Polianthes species area of distribution to assess the risk of species extinction applying the MER (Method of Evaluation of Risk extinction of wild species for Mexico): area of occupancy, extent of occurrence, and ecological modeling. We also found the richness areas of distribution of this genus. We compared the species distributions with Terrestrial Protected Regions (TPR) and Natural Protected Areas (NPA). Although the three methods used to calculate the species area of distribution agree about the highly restricted nature of Polianthes species. The area of occupancy sub-estimate the species distribution, while the extent of occurrence over-estimate it for species with disjoint distribution. Thus, we recommend the use of ecological modeling to improve the assessment of the current species distribution area to apply the MER. Most Polianthes species are distributed in the Sierra Madre Occidental and Transvolcanic Belt. Three species do not occur in any of the NPA or TPR, one species has suitable habitat in three TPR but has not been recorded there, and one species, P. palustris, is likely extinct.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2013

Ethnobotany of medicinal plants used in Xalpatlahuac, Guerrero, México.

María del Carmen Juárez-Vázquez; Candy Carranza-Álvarez; Angel Josabad Alonso-Castro; Violeta F. González-Alcaraz; Eliseo Bravo-Acevedo; Felipe Jair Chamarro-Tinajero; Eloy Solano

ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL IMPORTANCE Medicinal plants have been used for centuries for the empirical treatment of many diseases. This study documented the use of plant species in traditional medicine in the municipality of Xalpatlahuac, Guerrero, México. MATERIALS AND METHODS Direct interviews were performed with inhabitants from Xalpatlahuac. The interviews were analyzed with two quantitative tools: (a) the informant consensus factor (ICF) that estimates the level of agreement about which medicinal plants may be used for each category and (b) the relative importance (RI) that determines the extent of potential utilization of each species. RESULTS A total of 67 plant species with medicinal purposes, belonging to 36 families and used to treat 55 illnesses and 3 cultural filiations were reported by interviewees. Nineteen mixtures with medicinal plants were reported by the interviewers. Mentha piperita was the most used plant for combinations (4 mixtures). The results of the ICF showed that diseases of the respiratory and digestive systems had the greatest agreement. The most versatile species according to their RI are Marrubium vulgare, Mimosa albida and Psidium guajava.. CONCLUSION This study demonstrates that plant species play an important role in healing practices and magical-religious rituals among inhabitants from Xalpatlahuac, Guerrero, Mexico. Furthermore, pharmacological, phytochemical and toxicological studies with medicinal flora, including mixtures, are required for the experimental validation of their traditional uses.


Conservation Biology | 2009

A GIS-based comparison of the Mexican national and IUCN methods for determining extinction risk.

Teresa Patricia Feria Arroyo; Mark E. Olson; Abisaí García-Mendoza; Eloy Solano

The national systems used in the evaluation of extinction risk are often touted as more readily applied and somehow more regionally appropriate than the system of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). We compared risk assessments of the Mexican national system (method for evaluation of risk of extinction of wild species [MER]) with the IUCN system for the 16 Polianthes taxa (Agavaceae), a genus of plants with marked variation in distribution sizes. We used a novel combination of herbarium data, geographic information systems (GIS), and species distribution models to provide rapid, repeatable estimates of extinction risk. Our GIS method showed that the MER and the IUCN system use similar data. Our comparison illustrates how the IUCN method can be applied even when all desirable data are not available, and that the MER offers no special regional advantage with respect to the IUCN regional system. Instead, our results coincided, with both systems identifying 14 taxa of conservation concern and the remaining two taxa of low risk, largely because both systems use similar information. An obstacle for the application of the MER is that there are no standards for quantifying the criteria of habitat condition and intrinsic biological vulnerability. If these impossible-to-quantify criteria are left out, what are left are geographical distribution and the impact of human activity, essentially the considerations we were able to assess for the IUCN method. Our method has the advantage of making the IUCN criteria easy to apply, and because each step can be standardized between studies, it ensures greater comparability of extinction risk estimates among taxa.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2017

Use of medicinal plants by health professionals in Mexico

Angel Josabad Alonso-Castro; Fabiola Domínguez; Juan José Maldonado-Miranda; Luis Jesús Castillo-Pérez; Candy Carranza-Álvarez; Eloy Solano; Mario A. Isiordia-Espinoza; María del Carmen Juárez-Vázquez; Juan Ramón Zapata-Morales; Marco Antonio Argueta-Fuertes; Alan Joel Ruiz-Padilla; César R. Solorio-Alvarado; Joceline Estefanía Rangel-Velázquez; Rolffy Ortiz-Andrade; Ignacio González-Sánchez; Gustavo Cruz-Jiménez; Luis Manuel Orozco-Castellanos

ETHNOPHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE The use of medicinal plants in Mexico has been documented since pre-Hispanic times. Nevertheless, the level of use of medicinal plants by health professionals in Mexico remains to be explored. AIM OF THE STUDY To evaluate the use, acceptance and prescription of medicinal plants by health professionals in 9 of the states of Mexico. MATERIALS AND METHODS Direct and indirect interviews, regarding the use and acceptance of medicinal plants, with health professionals (n=1614), including nurses, physicians, pharmacists, and odontologists from nine states in Mexico were performed from January 2015 to July 2016. The interviews were analyzed with the factor the informant consensus (FIC). RESULTS The information obtained indicated that 46% of those interviewed feel patients should not use medicinal plants as an alternative therapy. Moreover, 54% of health professionals, and 49% of the physicians have used medicinal plants as an alternative therapy for several diseases. Twenty eight percent of health professionals, and 26% of the physicians, have recommended or prescribed medicinal plants to their patients, whereas 73% of health professionals were in agreement with receiving academic information regarding the use and prescription of medicinal plants. A total of 77 plant species used for medicinal purposes, belonging to 40 botanical families were reported by the interviewed. The results of the FIC showed that the categories of diseases of the digestive system (FIC=0.901) and diseases of the respiratory system (FIC=0.898) had the greatest agreement. CONCLUSIONS This study shows that medicinal plants are used for primary health care in Mexico by health professionals.


Brittonia | 2015

Milla valliflora (Themidaceae), a new species from southern Mexico

Jorge Gutiérrez; Eloy Solano

Milla valliflora, a new species from the states of Oaxaca and Puebla, Mexico, is described and illustrated. Its morphology is compared to M. biflora, M. filifolia and M. oaxacana. The new species is distinguished by the presence of a rhizome, shorter leaves, an inconspicuous pedicel joint, a long floral tube, narrowly elliptic tepals and yellow anthers.ResumenSe describe e ilustra Milla valliflora, especie nueva de los estados de Oaxaca y Puebla, México. Se compara morfológicamente con M. biflora, M. filifolia y M. oaxacana. Se distingue por la presencia de un rizoma, hojas cortas, pedicelo con articulación inconspicua, tubo floral largo, tépalos angostamente elípticos y anteras amarillas.


Plant Systematics and Evolution | 2018

Taxonomic implications of the morphological and genetic variation of cultivated and domesticated populations of the Agave angustifolia complex (Agavoideae, Asparagaceae) in Oaxaca, Mexico

Miguel Rivera-Lugo; Abisaí García-Mendoza; June Simpson; Eloy Solano; Katia Gil-Vega

The Agave angustifolia complex, distributed from Mexico to Costa Rica, comprises four species and five varieties, including three species used for mescal production. The complex is represented in the Mexican state of Oaxaca by two wild taxa, A. angustifolia var. angustifolia and A. angustifolia var. rubescens, the cultivated form A. angustifolia “Espadín” and the partially cultivated species A. rodacantha. The aims of this study were to investigate the morphological and genetic variation of the A. angustifolia complex in the state of Oaxaca and to identify traits useful for taxonomic delimitation. Four wild and three cultivated populations of A. angustifolia from Oaxaca, one population of A. tequilana from Guanajuato and one population of A. angustifolia from Sonora were sampled for morphological, genetic and cytometric analyses. We showed that cultivated populations of A. angustifolia “Espadin,” A. rhodacantha and A. tequilana could be clearly differentiated from wild populations. Furthermore, the domesticated populations of A. angustifolia, known locally as “Espadin,” had a higher ploidy level and lower genetic variation than their related wild populations. The population of A. angustifolia from Sonora could be recognized as a different entity. Populations of A. rhodacantha need to be studied throughout their entire distribution area to further evaluate their taxonomic delimitation.


Ozone-science & Engineering | 2017

Chemical Scarification and Ozone in Seed Dormancy Alleviation of Wild and Domesticated Opuntia, Cactaceae

María Elena Monroy Vázquez; Cecilia B. Peña-Valdivia; José Rodolfo García; Eloy Solano; Huitziméngari Campos; Eduardo García

ABSTRACT Protocols for seed germination in the Opuntia genus are different and unsuitable for all their species. Dormancy of Opuntia seeds can be modified by the combination of scarification and an oxidizing agent such as O3, which could induce antioxidant and DNA-repair mechanisms or dormancy-breaking effects in hydrated seeds. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects that the combination of mechanical and chemical scarification with exposition to sub-lethal O3 doses have on seed germination and seedling growth of O. streptacantha Lem., O. megacantha Salm-Dyck, and O. ficus-indica (L.) Mill. Our hypothesis was that O3 favors germination on scarified seeds and that the magnitude of the effect is species-dependent. Water uptake and germination were quantified in seeds every 48 h, until their roots reached a 5-mm length. The results were analyzed with an analysis of variance and multiple means comparisons with the Tukey test. Accelerated water uptake was observed during the first 48 h; the maximum average was 33.5% in all species. The combination of acid scarification and imbibition in the presence of O3 increased (P ≤ 0. 05) germination (between 17.8 and 44.4%), mainly in O. streptacantha. O3 increased germination, regardless of the species. O3 can be used in sublethal doses to increase seed germination and seedling development in Opuntia genus.


Journal of Tropical Ecology | 2015

Effects of habitat fragmentation on the diversity of epiphytic orchids from a montane forest of southern Mexico

Ezequiel Hernández-Pérez; Eloy Solano

Epiphytic orchids are very diverse in montane forests, but fragmentation modifies this diversity. Twenty fragments were quantified to evaluate the effects of fragmentation on the alpha and beta diversities of epiphytic orchids in a montane forest located in southern Mexico. The following factors were evaluated: area, core area, shape, edge density, Euclidean nearest-neighbour distance fragment and contrast index. In each fragment, two transects of 2×50 m were drawn, and the trees with a diameter at breast height 20 cm were recorded. In each tree, the orchid species present were identified and quantified. Twenty-three species of epiphytic orchid in 234 phorophytes corresponding to 20 species were recorded. The epiphytic orchid richness per tree and species turnover was different between the phorophytes. The edge density and the contrast index had significant effects on the alpha diversity, while the isolation of the fragments significantly affected the beta diversity. The edge density positively affected the alpha diversity of the epiphytic orchids, likely through microclimatic changes caused by fragmentation. Drought-tolerant species were common on the edges of the fragments, and shade-tolerant species established on the core area of the fragments. This pattern most likely depends on the ecological range of the taxa, which is crucial to their development and persistence in fragmented habitats.


Terra Latinoamericana | 2010

SALINITY EFFECT ON Prosopis laevigata SEEDLINGS

Ramiro Ríos-Gómez; Carlos Enrique Salas-García; Arcadio Monroy-Ata; Eloy Solano


Acta Botanica Mexicana | 2007

Polianthes oaxanana y P. geminiflora var. pueblensis (Agavaceae), taxa nuevos de México

Abisaí García-Mendoza; Eloy Solano

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Abisaí García-Mendoza

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Ramiro Ríos-Gómez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Teresa Terrazas

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Jorge Gutiérrez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Carlos Castillejos-Cruz

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Héctor Serrano-Casas

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Candy Carranza-Álvarez

Universidad Autónoma de San Luis Potosí

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Ezequiel Hernández-Pérez

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Leticia Álvarez Estrada

Mexican Social Security Institute

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