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Dive into the research topics where Óscar Frías is active.

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Featured researches published by Óscar Frías.


Molecular Ecology | 2002

Gender and viability selection on morphology in fledgling pied flycatchers

Jaime Potti; José A. Dávila; José Luis Tella; Óscar Frías; S. Villar

Until recently, analyses of gender‐dependent differences in viability selection and the ontogeny of sexual size dimorphism have been plagued by difficulties in determining the sex of nestling birds on the basis of morphology. Recently, this problem was overcome using molecular sex identification to report for the first time body‐size‐mediated antagonistic selection on the viability of male and female collared flycatchers. We used molecular sex identification to analyse natural selection on fledgling viability, sexual size dimorphism and effects of parasites in relation to gender in a Mediterranean population of the related pied flycatcher Ficedula hypoleuca. There was directional positive selection on fledgling weight but no selection on tarsus length. Fledgling weight was the most important determinant of fledgling survival, with heavier fledglings having increased viability. Although selective trends were of the same sign for both sexes, only among female fledglings were selection differentials and gradients statistically significant. Therefore, similar trends in selection were revealed in analyses of a data set where sex was ignored and in separate analyses using same‐sex sibship trait means. Mite nest ectoparasites negatively affected fledgling weight, and the effects were stronger in female than male fledglings. There was no effect of parasitism on the tarsus length in males, as previously reported in retrospective analyses performed without knowledge of sex until recruitment. Overall, selection on fledgling viability on the basis of morphological traits and hatching date was not confounded by an individuals gender.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2005

Environmental-induced acquisition of nuptial plumage expression: a role of denaturation of feather carotenoproteins?

Guillermo Blanco; Óscar Frías; Juan Garrido-Fernández; Dámaso Hornero-Méndez

Several avian species show a bright carotenoid-based coloration during spring and following a period of duller coloration during the previous winter, despite carotenoids presumably being fully deposited in feathers during the autumn moult. Carotenoid-based breast feathers of male linnets (Carduelis cannabina) increased in hue (redness), saturation and brightness after exposing them to outdoor conditions from winter to spring. This represents the first experimental evidence showing that carotenoid-based plumage coloration may increase towards a colourful expression due to biotic or abiotic environmental factors acting directly on full-grown feathers when carotenoids may be fully functional. Sunlight ultraviolet (UV) irradiation was hypothesized to denature keratin and other proteins that might protect pigments from degradation by this and other environmental factors, suggesting that sunlight UV irradiation is a major factor in the colour increase from winter to spring. Feather proteins and other binding molecules, if existing in the follicles, may be linked to carotenoids since their deposition into feathers to protect colourful features of associated carotenoids during the non-breeding season when its main signalling function may be relaxed. Progress towards uncovering the significance of concealment and subsequent display of colour expression should consider the potential binding and protecting nature of feather proteins associated with carotenoids.


Ecological Entomology | 2017

Vertical transmission in feather mites: insights into its adaptive value

Jorge Doña; Jaime Potti; Iván de la Hera; Guillermo Blanco; Óscar Frías; Roger Jovani

1. The consequences of symbiont transmission strategies are better understood than their adaptive causes.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Repeatability of Feather Mite Prevalence and Intensity in Passerine Birds

Javier Diaz-Real; David Serrano; Javier Pérez-Tris; Sofía Fernández-González; Ana Bermejo; Juan Antonio Calleja; Javier Puente; Diana De Palacio; J. L. Martínez; Rubén Moreno-Opo; Carlos Ponce; Óscar Frías; José Luis Tella; Anders Pape Møller; Jordi Figuerola; Péter L. Pap; I. Kovács; Csongor I. Vágási; Leandro Meléndez; Guillermo Blanco; Eduardo Aguilera; Juan Carlos Senar; Ismael Galván; Francisco Atiénzar; Emilio Barba; José L. Cantó; Verónica Cortés; Juan S. Monrós; Rubén Piculo; Matthias Vögeli

Understanding why host species differ so much in symbiont loads and how this depends on ecological host and symbiont traits is a major issue in the ecology of symbiosis. A first step in this inquiry is to know whether observed differences among host species are species-specific traits or more related with host-symbiont environmental conditions. Here we analysed the repeatability (R) of the intensity and the prevalence of feather mites to partition within- and among-host species variance components. We compiled the largest dataset so far available: 119 Paleartic passerine bird species, 75,944 individual birds, ca. 1.8 million mites, seven countries, 23 study years. Several analyses and approaches were made to estimate R and adjusted repeatability (Radj) after controlling for potential confounding factors (breeding period, weather, habitat, spatial autocorrelation and researcher identity). The prevalence of feather mites was moderately repeatable (R = 0.26–0.53; Radj = 0.32–0.57); smaller values were found for intensity (R = 0.19–0.30; Radj = 0.18–0.30). These moderate repeatabilities show that prevalence and intensity of feather mites differ among species, but also that the high variation within species leads to considerable overlap among bird species. Differences in the prevalence and intensity of feather mites within bird species were small among habitats, suggesting that local factors are playing a secondary role. However, effects of local climatic conditions were partially observed for intensity.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Age-Related Relationships between Innate Immunity and Plasma Carotenoids in an Obligate Avian Scavenger

Isabel López-Rull; Dámaso Hornero-Méndez; Óscar Frías; Guillermo Blanco

Variation in immunity is influenced by allocation trade-offs that are expected to change between age-classes as a result of the different environmental and physiological conditions that individuals encounter over their lifetime. One such trade-off occurs with carotenoids, which must be acquired with food and are involved in a variety of physiological functions. Nonetheless, relationships between immunity and carotenoids in species where these micronutrients are scarce due to diet are poorly studied. Among birds, vultures show the lowest concentrations of plasma carotenoids due to a diet based on carrion. Here, we investigated variations in the relationships between innate immunity (hemagglutination by natural antibodies and hemolysis by complement proteins), pathogen infection and plasma carotenoids in nestling and adult griffon vultures (Gyps fulvus) in the wild. Nestlings showed lower hemolysis, higher total carotenoid concentration and higher pathogen infection than adults. Hemolysis was negatively related to carotenoid concentration only in nestlings. A differential carotenoid allocation to immunity due to the incomplete development of the immune system of nestlings compared with adults is suggested linked to, or regardless of, potential differences in parasite infection, which requires experimental testing. We also found that individuals with more severe pathogen infections showed lower hemagglutination than those with a lower intensity infection irrespective of their age and carotenoid level. These results are consistent with the idea that intraspecific relationships between innate immunity and carotenoids may change across ontogeny, even in species lacking carotenoid-based coloration. Thus, even low concentrations of plasma carotenoids due to a scavenger diet can be essential to the development and activation of the immune system in growing birds.


Molecular Ecology | 2017

Extreme genetic structure in a social bird species despite high dispersal capacity

Francisco Morinha; José A. Dávila; Estela Bastos; João Alexandre Cabral; Óscar Frías; José L. González; Paulo Travassos; Diogo Carvalho; Borja Milá; Guillermo Blanco

Social barriers have been shown to reduce gene flow and contribute to genetic structure among populations in species with high cognitive capacity and complex societies, such as cetaceans, apes and humans. In birds, high dispersal capacity is thought to prevent population divergence unless major geographical or habitat barriers induce isolation patterns by dispersal, colonization or adaptation limitation. We report that Iberian populations of the red‐billed chough, a social, gregarious corvid with high dispersal capacity, show a striking degree of genetic structure composed of at least 15 distinct genetic units. Monitoring of marked individuals over 30 years revealed that long‐distance movements over hundreds of kilometres are common, yet recruitment into breeding populations is infrequent and highly philopatric. Genetic differentiation is weakly related to geographical distance, and habitat types used are overall qualitatively similar among regions and regularly shared by individuals of different populations, so that genetic structure is unlikely to be due solely to isolation by distance or isolation by adaptation. Moreover, most population nuclei showed relatively high levels of genetic diversity, suggesting a limited role for genetic drift in significantly differentiating populations. We propose that social mechanisms may underlie this unprecedented level of genetic structure in birds through a pattern of isolation by social barriers not yet described, which may have driven this remarkable population divergence in the absence of geographical and environmental barriers.


Bird Study | 2014

Commonness of not-so-common birds: the need for baseline knowledge of actual population size for the validation of population size predictions

Guillermo Blanco; Óscar Frías; Jesús A. Cuevas; José L. González; Félix Martínez

Capsule The hypothesized regional population size of a common species in Spain was found to be unreliable when compared with a complete and simultaneous single-species direct census. Aims To provide a regional census of Eurasian Jackdaws Corvus monedula as an example to highlight the crucial importance of baseline knowledge of actual population size of common species for validation and calibration of population size predictions derived from extrapolation. Methods Population size was measured by means of simultaneous counts of winter communal roosts after determining the best census date and other relevant information on flock routines, foraging areas and potential sources of count variability. Results A large discrepancy between hypothesized (∼330 000 individuals) and directly censused population size (∼15 000 individuals) was recorded. Conclusion Programmes aimed at establishing population size of wildlife by statistical inference should attempt to explicitly test their predictions by comparison with directly censused population sizes of particular species in control areas.


PLOS ONE | 2018

Influence of habitat suitability and sex-related detectability on density and population size estimates of habitat-specialist warblers

Óscar Frías; Luis M. Bautista; Francisco V. Dénes; Jesús A. Cuevas; Félix Martínez; Guillermo Blanco

Knowledge about the population size and trends of common bird species is crucial for setting conservation priorities and management actions. Multi-species large-scale monitoring schemes have often provided such estimates relying on extrapolation of relative abundances in particular habitats to large-scale areas. Here we show an alternative to inference-rich predictive models, proposing methods to deal with caveats of population size estimations in habitat-specialist species, reed warblers (Acrocephalus scirpaceus and Acrocephalus arundinaceus). Reed warblers were only found in pure reedbeds within riparian woodlands or in riparian vegetation scattered within or around reedbed patches, as expected according to their habitat specialization. The proportion of individuals located in reedbed associated with lotic and lentic waters differed between species, and no reed warbler was recorded in reedbed located along dry streams. This indicates that microhabitat features or their effects on reedbed structure and other factors made a proportion of the apparently available habitat unsuitable for both warbler species. Most warblers detected were males performing territorial singing (females seldom sing and do not perform elaborate territorial song, and are undistinguishable from males by plumage). The regional population sizes of the warbler species (~4000 individuals of A. scirpaceus and ~ 1000 individuals of A. arundinaceus) were much smaller than those estimated for the same area by transforming relative abundance obtained at a national scale to population size through extrapolation by habitat at a regional scale. These results highlight the importance of considering the habitat actually used and its suitability, the manner of sex-related detection, population sex-ratio and their interactions in population estimates. Ideally, the value of predictive methods to estimate population size of common species should be tested before conducting large-scale monitoring, rather than a posteriori. Although logistically challenging, this can be achieved by designing monitoring programs including an intensive sampling of abundance in ad hoc reference areas of variable size.


Environmental Research | 2018

Integrating population connectivity into pollution assessment: Overwintering mixing reveals flame retardant contamination in breeding areas in a migratory raptor

Guillermo Blanco; Fabrizio Sergio; Óscar Frías; Pablo Salinas; Alessandro Tanferna; Fernando Hiraldo; Damià Barceló; Ethel Eljarrat

ABSTRACT Determining the exposure and magnitude at which various pollutants are differentially assimilated at the breeding and non‐breeding grounds of migratory wildlife is challenging. Here, the possibility of applying the migratory connectivity framework to understanding contamination in birds is illustrated by considering flame retardants in inviable eggs of a migratory raptor, the black kite (Milvus migrans). The occurrence and concentration of legacy and emerging compounds in eggs from the southeastern peri‐urban area of Madrid city, central Spain, were compared with those from Doñana National Park in southern Spain. A much higher occurrence and concentration of multiple polybrominated diphenyl ethers and Dechlorane 602 were found in Madrid than Doñana, but the opposite patterns were found for Dechlorane Plus. Individuals from these and other breeding areas in western Europe showed a strong intermixing pattern over widespread wintering areas in Africa, as assessed by ringing recoveries and movements tracked by satellite devices. This diffuse migratory connectivity reveals breeding areas as the main contamination grounds. High contamination burdens sequestered in eggs point to rapid assimilation of these compounds before laying, associated with important emission sources in Madrid, especially landfills of partially incinerated urban refuse, and other anthropogenic operations. Diet composition regarding aquatic vs. terrestrial prey, and bioaccumulation and biomagnification processes are suggested to explain differential assimilation of some compounds, especially Dechlorane Plus in Doñana, although a local emission source polluting this area cannot be ruled out. Insight from the migratory connectivity framework can help to disentangle large‐scale patterns of contaminant uptake and refocus attention on key regions and potential causes of chemical hazards in declining migratory species and human populations. HighlightsThis multidisciplinary study integrates population connectivity into pollution assessment.Flame retardants in inviable eggs of black kites were assessed in two populations.A much higher occurrence and concentration of flame retardants were found in Madrid than Doñana.Kites from Western Europe showed a strong winter intermixing in Africa.Diffuse migratory connectivity reveals breeding areas as the main contamination grounds.


Environmental Microbiology | 2007

Geographical variation in cloacal microflora and bacterial antibiotic resistance in a threatened avian scavenger in relation to diet and livestock farming practices

Guillermo Blanco; Jesús A. Lemus; Javier Grande; Laura Gangoso; Juan Manuel Grande; José A. Donázar; Bernardo Arroyo; Óscar Frías; Fernando Hiraldo

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Guillermo Blanco

Spanish National Research Council

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David Serrano

Spanish National Research Council

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José Luis Tella

Spanish National Research Council

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Roger Jovani

Spanish National Research Council

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Dámaso Hornero-Méndez

Spanish National Research Council

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Eduardo Aguilera

Spanish National Research Council

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Fernando Hiraldo

Spanish National Research Council

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Félix Martínez

Spanish National Research Council

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