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Dive into the research topics where Facundo Muñoz is active.

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Featured researches published by Facundo Muñoz.


Veterinary Parasitology | 2013

Bovine paramphistomosis in Galicia (Spain): Prevalence, intensity, aetiology and geospatial distribution of the infection

Marta González-Warleta; Silvia Lladosa; José Antonio Castro-Hermida; A.M. Martínez-Ibeas; David Conesa; Facundo Muñoz; Antonio López-Quílez; Yolanda Manga-González; Mercedes Mezo

The present study explored various basic aspects of the epidemiology of paramphistomosis in Galicia, the main cattle producing region in Spain. In total, 589 cows from different farms located across the region were selected at random in the slaughterhouse for examination of the rumens and reticula for the presence of Paramphistomidae flukes. Paramphistomes were found in 111 of 589 necropsied cows (18.8%; 95% CI: 15.7-21.9%), with higher prevalences of infection in beef cows than in dairy cows (29.2% vs 13.9%). Although the number of flukes per animal was generally low (median=266 flukes), some cows harboured large parasite burdens (up to 11,895 flukes), which may have harmful effects on their health or productivity. Cows with higher parasite burdens also excreted greater numbers of fluke eggs in their faeces, which suggests that heavily parasitized mature cows play an important role in the transmission of paramphistomosis. This role may be particularly important in Galicia, where the roe deer, which is the only wild ruminant in the study area, was found not to be a reservoir for the infection. The use of morpho-anatomical and molecular techniques applied to a large number of fluke specimens provided reliable confirmation that Calicophoron daubneyi is the only species of the family Paramphistomidae that parasitizes cattle in Galicia. The environmental data from the farms of origin of the necropsied cows were used in Bayesian geostatistical models to predict the probability of infection by C. daubneyi throughout the region. The results revealed the role of environmental risk factors in explaining the geographical heterogeneity in the probability of infection in beef and dairy cattle. These explanatory factors were used to construct predictive maps showing the areas with the highest predicted risk of infection as well as the uncertainty associated with the predictions.


Stochastic Environmental Research and Risk Assessment | 2013

Estimation and prediction of the spatial occurrence of fish species using Bayesian latent Gaussian models

Facundo Muñoz; M. Grazia Pennino; David Conesa; Antonio López-Quílez; Jose M. Bellido

A methodological approach for modelling the occurrence patterns of species for the purpose of fisheries management is proposed here. The presence/absence of the species is modelled with a hierarchical Bayesian spatial model using the geographical and environmental characteristics of each fishing location. Maps of predicted probabilities of presence are generated using Bayesian kriging. Bayesian inference on the parameters and prediction of presence/absence in new locations (Bayesian kriging) are made by considering the model as a latent Gaussian model, which allows the use of the integrated nested Laplace approximation (INLA) software (which has been seen to be quite a bit faster than the well-known MCMC methods). In particular, the spatial effect has been implemented with the stochastic partial differential equation (SPDE) approach. The methodology is evaluated on Mediterranean horse mackerel (Trachurus mediterraneus) in the Western Mediterranean. The analysis shows that environmental and geographical factors can play an important role in directing local distribution and variability in the occurrence of species. Although this approach is used to recognize the habitat of mackerel, it could also be for other different species and life stages in order to improve knowledge of fish populations and communities.


Mathematical and Computer Modelling | 2009

Geostatistical computing of acoustic maps in the presence of barriers

Antonio López-Quílez; Facundo Muñoz

Acoustic maps are the main diagnostic tools used by authorities for addressing the growing problem of urban acoustic contamination. Geostatistics models phenomena with spatial variation, but restricted to homogeneous prediction regions. The presence of barriers such as buildings introduces discontinuities in prediction areas. In this paper we investigate how to incorporate information of a geographical nature into the process of geostatistical prediction. In addition, we study the use of a Cost-Based distance to quantify the correlation between locations.


Phytopathology | 2016

Rising Out of the Ashes: Additive Genetic Variation for Crown and Collar Resistance to Hymenoscyphus fraxineus in Fraxinus excelsior

Facundo Muñoz; Benoit Marçais; Jean Dufour; Arnaud Dowkiw

Since the early 1990s, ash dieback due to the invasive ascomycete Hymenoscyphus fraxineus is threatening Fraxinus excelsior in most of its natural range. Previous studies reported significant levels of genetic variability in susceptibility in F. excelsior either in field or inoculation experiments. The present study was based on a field experiment planted in 1995, 15 years before onset of the disease. Crown and collar status were monitored on 777 trees from 23 open-pollinated progenies originating from three French provenances. Health status was modeled using a Bayesian approach where spatiotemporal effects were explicitly taken into account. Moderate narrow-sense heritability was found for crown dieback (h2 = 0.42). This study is first to show that resistance at the collar level is also heritable (h2 = 0.49 for collar lesions prevalence and h2 = 0.42 for their severity) and that there is significant genetic correlation (r = 0.40) between the severities of crown and collar symptoms. There was no evidence for differences between provenances. Family effects were detected, but computing individual breeding values showed that most of the genetic variation lies within families. In agreement with previous reports, early flushing correlates with healthier crown. Implications of these results in disease management and breeding are discussed.


Molecular Breeding | 2017

Improving accuracy of breeding values by incorporating genomic information in spatial-competition mixed models

Eduardo P. Cappa; Yousry A. El-Kassaby; Facundo Muñoz; Martín N. Garcia; Pamela V. Villalba; Jaroslav Klápště; Susana N. Marcucci Poltri

Climate change and the increasing demand for sustainable energy resources require urgent strategies to increase the accuracy of selection in tree breeding (associated with higher gain). We investigated the combined pedigree and genomic-based relationship approach and its impact on the accuracy of predicted breeding values using data from 5-year-old Eucalyptus grandis progeny trial. The number of trees that can be genotyped in a tree breeding population is limited; therefore, the combined approach can be a feasible and efficient strategy to increase the genetic gain and provide more accurate predicted breeding values. We calculated the accuracy of predicted breeding values for two growth traits, diameter at breast height and total height, using two evaluation approaches: the combined approach and the classical pedigree-based approach. We also investigated the influence of two different trait heritabilities as well as the inclusion of competition genetic effects or environmental heterogeneity in an individual-tree mixed model on the estimated variance components and accuracy of breeding values. The genomic information of genotyped trees is automatically propagated to all trees with the combined approach, including the non-genotyped mothers. This increased the accuracy of overall breeding values, except for the non-genotyped trees from the competition model. The increase in the accuracy was higher for the total height, the trait with low heritability. The combined approach is a simple, fast, and accurate genomic selection method for genetic evaluation of growth traits in E. grandis and tree species in general. It is simple to implement in a traditional individual-tree mixed model and provides an easy extension to individual-tree mixed models with competition effects and/or environmental heterogeneity.


Plant Science | 2018

Genomic-based multiple-trait evaluation in Eucalyptus grandis using dominant DArT markers

Eduardo P. Cappa; Yousry A. El-Kassaby; Facundo Muñoz; Martín N. Garcia; Pamela V. Villalba; Jaroslav Klápště; Susana N. Marcucci Poltri

We investigated the impact of combining the pedigree- and genomic-based relationship matrices in a multiple-trait individual-tree mixed model (a.k.a., multiple-trait combined approach) on the estimates of heritability and on the genomic correlations between growth and stem straightness in an open-pollinated Eucalyptus grandis population. Additionally, the added advantage of incorporating genomic information on the theoretical accuracies of parents and offspring breeding values was evaluated. Our results suggested that the use of the combined approach for estimating heritabilities and additive genetic correlations in multiple-trait evaluations is advantageous and including genomic information increases the expected accuracy of breeding values. Furthermore, the multiple-trait combined approach was proven to be superior to the single-trait combined approach in predicting breeding values, in particular for low-heritability traits. Finally, our results advocate the use of the combined approach in forest tree progeny testing trials, specifically when a multiple-trait individual-tree mixed model is considered.


G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics | 2018

Deciphering Hybrid Larch Reaction Norms Using Random Regression

Alexandre Marchal; Carl D. Schlichting; Rémy Gobin; Philippe Balandier; Frédéric Millier; Facundo Muñoz; Luc E. Pâques; Leopoldo Sanchez

The link between phenotypic plasticity and heterosis is a broad fundamental question, with stakes in breeding. We report a case-study evaluating temporal series of wood ring traits of hybrid larch (Larix decidua × L. kaempferi and reciprocal) in relation to soil water availability. Growth rings record the tree plastic responses to past environmental conditions, and we used random regressions to estimate the reaction norms of ring width and wood density with respect to water availability. We investigated the role of phenotypic plasticity on the construction of hybrid larch heterosis and on the expression of its quantitative genetic parameters. The data came from an intra-/interspecific diallel mating design between both parental species. Progenies were grown in two environmentally contrasted sites, in France. Ring width plasticity with respect to water availability was confirmed, as all three taxa produced narrower rings under the lowest water availability. Hybrid larch appeared to be the most plastic taxon as its superiority over its parental species increased with increasing water availability. Despite the low heritabilities of the investigated traits, we found that the expression of a reliable negative correlation between them was conditional to the water availability environment. Finally, by means of a complementary simulation, we demonstrated that random regression can be applied to model the reaction norms of non-repeated records of phenotypic plasticity bound by a family structure. Random regression is a powerful tool for the modeling of reaction norms in various contexts, especially perennial species.


Omega-international Journal of Management Science | 2016

Optimizing the level of service quality of a bike-sharing system

Ramón Alvarez-Valdés; José Manuel Belenguer; Enrique Benavent; José D. Bermúdez; Facundo Muñoz; Enriqueta Vercher; Francisco Verdejo


Journal of Sea Research | 2013

Modeling sensitive elasmobranch habitats

M. Grazia Pennino; Facundo Muñoz; David Conesa; Antonio López-Quίlez; José Marίa Bellido


Journal of Sea Research | 2014

Bayesian spatio-temporal discard model in a demersal trawl fishery

M. Grazia Pennino; Facundo Muñoz; David Conesa; Antonio López-Quílez; Jose M. Bellido

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M. Grazia Pennino

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Arnaud Dowkiw

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Leopoldo Sanchez

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Yousry A. El-Kassaby

University of British Columbia

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Alexandre Marchal

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Frédéric Millier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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