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Featured researches published by José Luis Prado.
Archive | 2005
Manuel Nieto; Joaquín Hortal; Cayetana Martinez-Maza; Jorge Morales; Edgardo Ortiz-Jaureguizar; Pablo Peláez-Campomanes; Martin Pickford; José Luis Prado; Jesús Rodríguez; Briggite Senut; Dolores Soria; Sara Varela
Local mammalian communities in Africa present the highest species richness in the world, only paralleled by some communities in the Oriental biogeographic region. Differences in mammalian species richness are especially outstanding when compared with South American communities, despite their similar latitudinal position and regional species richness. Recent study has shown that these differences are not only related to contemporary determinants but also to biogeographic-historic factors, which acted on the composition of the regional pool of species. One of the main differences in composition between the two regions relates to the high diversification of large mammals in Africa, which greatly contributes to the high values of local community richness in this region. The absence of extant large mammals in the South American region has been proposed to result from Pleistocene-Holocene extinctions, which affected large mammals all over the world. However, a gradual pattern of decrease in the abundance of large mammal species can be appreciated in almost all regions except Africa since the late Miocene and through the Pliocene. To test these hypotheses we compare the patterns of macromammal body mass distribution — at regional and local scales — in the two regions over the past 20 million years and relate the observed changes to major geological events.
Archive | 2012
María Teresa Alberdi; José Luis Prado; Esperanza Cerdeño; Beatriz Azanza
Maria T. Alberdi1, Jose L. Prado2, Esperanza Cerdeno3 and Beatriz Azanza4 1Departamento de Paleobiologia, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, CSIC, Madrid, 2INCUAPA, Departamento de Arqueologia, F.C.S., Universidad Nacional del Centro, Olavarria, 3Departamento de Paleontologia, IANIGLA, Centro Cientifico Tecnologico CONICET, Mendoza, 4Departamento de Ciencias de la Tierra, Universidad de Zaragoza, Zaragoza, 1,3Spain 2,4Argentina
Coloquios de Paleontología | 2003
Begoña Sánchez; José Luis Prado; María Teresa Alberdi
To reconstruct the paleodiet and habitat preference of gomphotheres, we measured the carbon and oxygen isotope composi- tion of 32 bone and tooth samples of Stegomastodon platensis (AMEGHINO, 1888) from 10 different Pleistocene localities in Pampean Region (Argentina). In order to compare the different stratigraphic levels we have divided the samples in two groups: middle and late Pleistocene. Samples from the middle Pleistocene are more homogeneous, with a range of 13 C values between -9.0 to -5.9‰. This data indicates a mixed C 3 y C 4 diet. On the contrary, samples from late Pleistocene show a wide range of diet adaptation (with a range 13 C values between -12.11 to -6.09 ‰), since specimens that indicate an exclusively C 3 diet from latest Pleistocene, to others with a mixed- feeder diet. Several nutritional hypotheses to explain late Pleistocene extinctions adopt the assumption that extinct taxa had specialized diets. The resource partitioning preference of Stegomastodon platensis from latest Pleistocene supports in part this hypothesis.
Archive | 2002
José Luis Prado; María Teresa Alberdi; Gustavo Gómez
Coloquios de Paleontología | 2003
Begoña Sánchez Chillón; José Luis Prado; María Teresa Alberdi
Archive | 2001
José Luis Prado; María Teresa Alberdi; Beatriz Azanza; Begoña Sánchez Chillón; D. Frassinetti
Revista Española de Paleontología | 2009
José Luis Prado; María Teresa Alberdi
Archive | 2017
José Luis Prado; María Teresa Alberdi
Archive | 2015
Argentine Pampas; José Luis Prado; Incuapa Conicet; José Gutiérrez Abascal
Archive | 2011
María Teresa Alberdi; José Luis Prado; Edgardo Ortiz-Jaureguizar; Paula Posadas; Mariano de Donato; José Gutiérrez Abascal