Publications by authors named "C A Botero"

Cigarette butts are classified as plastic waste due to their composition of cellulose acetate fibers and are commonly found in beach sand. Their persistence in the environment, low biodegradability, and potential to interact with metals and metalloids during the aging process make them a significant subject of interest for research on coastal marine ecosystems. The aim of this study is to investigate the presence of metals such as hexavalent chromium Cr (VI), cadmium (Cd), and the metalloid arsenic (As) in cigarette butts (CBs), cigarette butt fibers (CBFs), and sand on a tourist beach in Cartagena, Colombia.

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Article Synopsis
  • Epistemic trust is about how much we trust the knowledge shared by others and whether we find it useful in our lives.
  • A study tested a questionnaire designed to measure epistemic trust and related concepts in Argentina, involving many participants.
  • The results showed important connections between how people trust information, their past experiences, and their emotional health, which could help in both research and practical situations.
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Globally, human house types are diverse, varying in shape, size, roof type, building materials, arrangement, decoration and many other features. Here we offer the first rigorous, global evaluation of the factors that influence the construction of traditional (vernacular) houses. We apply macroecological approaches to analyse data describing house features from 1900 to 1950 across 1000 societies.

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  • Eco-anxiety is a growing global concern related to environmental disasters, and the Hogg Eco-Anxiety Scale (HEAS) was translated into Spanish as HEAS-SP to address this issue in Spanish-speaking populations.
  • The validation of the HEAS-SP involved large samples from Argentina and Spain, confirming its reliability and consistency across different demographic groups.
  • Results indicated that eco-anxiety varies by gender and age, with Spanish participants reporting higher emotional responses and younger individuals showing increased levels of eco-anxiety.
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Evolutionary compromises are thought to be common under fluctuating selection because the mutations that best enable adaptation to one environmental context can often be detrimental to others. Yet, prior experimental work has shown that generalists can sometimes perform as well as specialists in their own environments. Here we use a highly replicated evolutionary experiment ( = 448 asexual lineages of the brewer's yeast) to show that even though fluctuation between two environmental conditions often induces evolutionary compromises (at least early on), it can also help reveal difficult to reach adaptive outcomes that ultimately improve performance in both environments.

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