Publications by authors named "Gerardo Guerrero-Jimenez"

Diapausing embryos encased within cladoceran ephippia result from sexual reproduction and increase genetic diversity. They are also important means by which species bypass harsh environmental conditions and disperse in space and time. Once released, ephippia usually sink to the benthos and remain there until hatching.

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Pollution in aquatic ecosystems has been increasing drastically worldwide changing their water quality. Therefore, species must be adapted to these new scenarios. In Aguascalientes City, four representative urban reservoirs contain lead in the water column and extremely high concentrations of sediments.

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Eutrophication, global warming, and rising carbon dioxide (CO) levels are the three most prevalent pressures impacting the biosphere. Despite their individual effects are well-known, it remains untested how oligotrophication (i.e.

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Article Synopsis
  • The rotifer species complex is well-studied, but its full systematics remain unclear, with extensive research revealing three main morphotypes: large (L), small-medium (SM), and small (SS).
  • Six species are currently described, along with nine unidentified taxa, specifically noting three officially described species in the large group (L1, L2, and L3), while a fourth species, L4, is informally recognized as 'Nevada.'
  • This study introduces a new species representing the L4 clade, named after a saline crater lake in Central Mexico, and confirms its identity using DNA markers (COI and ITS1), morphology, and ecological data.
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The study of sexual reproductive behavior supported by ultrastructural evidence is important in rotifers to describe differences among potential cryptic species. In this research, the morphology of the rotifer Brachionus bidentatus is described at the ultrastructural level, using electronic microscopy, together with a brief description and discussion of its sexual reproductive behavior. The characteristics of the (a) male, (b) the female, (c) the sexual egg or cyst, (d) the partenogenic egg, (e) the no-fecundated sexual egg (male egg), and (f) the trophi, were described.

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