Juan Héctor García-Chávez
Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla
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Publication
Featured researches published by Juan Héctor García-Chávez.
Biology Letters | 2016
Wesley Dáttilo; Armando Aguirre; Pedro Luna De la Torre; Lucas A. Kaminski; Juan Héctor García-Chávez
Mainly owing to their high diversity and abundance, ants are formidable as predators and defenders of foliage. Consequently, ants can exclude both invertebrate and vertebrate activity on plants via direct and indirect interactions as already shown in many previous studies. Here we present empirical evidence that objects resembling ant shape on dummy caterpillars were able to repel visually oriented predators. Moreover, we also show that rubber ants on dummy fruits can repel potential fruit dispersers. Our results have direct implications on the ecological and evolutionary dynamics of interactions in ant-based systems, as ant presence could affect the fitness of its partners. In short, our study highlights the importance of visual cues in interspecific interactions and opens a new way to study the effects of ant presence to test ecological and evolutionary hypotheses.
Zootaxa | 2014
Allen L. Norrbom; Ana Lucía Castillo-Meza; Juan Héctor García-Chávez; Martin Aluja; Juan Rull
Anastrepha tehuacana, a new species of Tephritidae (Diptera) from Tehuacán, Puebla, Mexico reared from seeds of Euphorbia tehuacana (Brandegee) V.W. Steinm. (Euphorbiaceae), is described and illustrated. Its probable relationship to A. relicta Hernández-Ortiz is discussed.
Entomological Science | 2017
Hugo Alejandro Álvarez; Juan Héctor García-Chávez; Jorge Alejandro Cebada-Ruiz
Male–male competition is strongly affected by female presence. In insects with primitive features such as megalopterans, however, it is not known how aggressiveness is expressed in the context of female presence. Here we examined the effect of social environments on the use of secondary sexual traits in the sexual behavior of the Mexican dobsonfly Corydalus bidenticulatus (Megaloptera: Corydalidae). Males of this species have exaggerated traits such as disproportionally elongated mandibles with no dentition, which is a secondary sexual trait used in competition over female access as well as males of other Corydalus species. We investigated how male–male interactions are carried out, and the scaling relationships of sexual and non‐sexual traits. Our results show that males of C. bidenticulatus are not indiscriminately aggressive. The decision whether to fight or not is affected by their social environments: males are aggressive against other males only when the presence of a female is detected. Results also suggest that mandibles and antennae are sexually dimorphic, being exaggerated and showing positive allometry only in males. In contrast, male genitalia, a sex‐specific trait, show negative allometry.
Journal of Arid Environments | 2015
Wesley Dáttilo; Armando Aguirre; R.V. Flores-Flores; Roberth Fagundes; Denise Lange; Juan Héctor García-Chávez; Kleber Del-Claro
Journal of Vegetation Science | 2014
Juan Héctor García-Chávez; Carlos Montaña; Yareni Perroni; Vinicio J. Sosa; José Bernardo García-Licona
Journal of Arid Environments | 2010
Juan Héctor García-Chávez; Vinicio J. Sosa; Carlos Montaña
Acta Oecologica-international Journal of Ecology | 2018
Pedro Luna; Juan Héctor García-Chávez; Wesley Dáttilo
THERYA | 2018
Raúl Sánchez-González; Anuar David Hernández-Saint Martin; Octavio César Rosas Rosas; Juan Héctor García-Chávez
Journal of Arid Environments | 2018
Pedro Luna; Diego Anjos; Juan Héctor García-Chávez; Wesley Dáttilo
Journal of Arid Environments | 2018
Pedro Luna; Yasmira Peñaloza-Arellanes; Ana Lucía Castillo-Meza; Juan Héctor García-Chávez; Wesley Dáttilo