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Guillermo Fandos

@gfandos

Assistant professor at @ucm.es studying how we can improve predictions of biodiversity responses to global change. #ConservationBiology 🌍, biogeography, movement ecology, Citizen science, #Rstats | www.gfandos.com

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20.10.2024
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Latest posts by Guillermo Fandos @gfandos

Muy interesante reflexión 👏. Evaluar ciencia no puede reducirse a un único indicador ni al factor de impacto. Difícil cambiar el sistema, pero el primer paso es asumir que la evaluación es compleja y no cabe en una sola métrica.

12.09.2025 20:53 👍 3 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
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Happy to be at #EOU2025! 🐦🏙️
If you want to know, how does urbanization impact migratory bird seasonal distribution (and you didn't manage to come to my poster yesterday), don't hesitate to find me and ask!
@eounion.bsky.social

20.08.2025 12:50 👍 13 🔁 5 💬 1 📌 0

Que buena pinta. Ya nos veremos por
allí

01.06.2025 12:56 👍 2 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Traveling tomorrow to Pontevedra to attend the SIBECOL-AEET meeting @sibecol-aeet-25.bsky.social
My keynote talk will be Monday evening (19:40 h). I'll present an updated overview of that elusive conundrum which links subindividual plant ecology with a set of independent epigenetic causal layers

31.05.2025 18:00 👍 40 🔁 3 💬 6 📌 1
Species occupancy is inflated by sink populations in productive environments but not unproductive environments You have to enable JavaScript in your browser's settings in order to use the eReader.

Our latest research in California's serpentine grasslands reveals that biodiversity patterns are shaped more by dispersal than environmental conditions alone esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10....

25.04.2025 16:30 👍 25 🔁 5 💬 1 📌 2
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NEW PAPER! Do you want to know how ocelots and agoutis interact in space AND time in #TropicalRainforests?🌳
Check our last paper led by Andrea Vallejo-Vargas and published @animalecology.bsky.social
besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10....

13.02.2025 15:23 👍 18 🔁 4 💬 0 📌 0

New PhD position @mncn-csic.bsky.social to work on biodiversity risk assessments, together with @miguelbaraujo.bsky.social and myself. More details here:
www.anabenitezlopez.com/job-offer-ph...

07.03.2025 22:00 👍 15 🔁 11 💬 1 📌 0

🎓 Becas disponibles
✅ Título de la Universidad Complutense de Madrid
✅ 100% presencial
💡 Aprende a:
✔ Aplicar programación y diferentes métodos estadísticos
✔ Analizar datos genéticos y genómicos
✔ Modelizar distribución y abundancia de especies

#Rstats #Formación #Bioinformática #stats #analytics

28.03.2025 11:52 👍 1 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0
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📢 Título de experto en Aplicaciones bioinformáticas en biodiversidad, ecología y evolución
📅 26 mayo - 4 julio | ⏰ 15:00 - 20:00
📍 Facultad de Biología, Universidad Complutense de Madrid
💰 300€
🎯 Metodología 100% práctica con proyectos y tutorización experta
📌 Inscríbete ya! ucm.es/formacion-pe...

28.03.2025 11:43 👍 7 🔁 5 💬 1 📌 0
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Next week (!!) we are presenting our workshop "integrating mechanisms into species distribution models" - don't miss it! Online 2-4 April www.biogeography.org/news/news/wo... @gfandos.bsky.social @biogeography.bsky.social

24.03.2025 16:40 👍 13 🔁 5 💬 0 📌 1

📝 "Useful R Packages & Resources"

👤 Steffi LaZerte

📖 Essential R packages & resources for data science, visualization, & workflows. Check it out!

🔗 https://steffilazerte.ca/posts/useful-packages/

#rladies #rstats #packages #resources #r

22.03.2025 07:18 👍 10 🔁 2 💬 0 📌 0
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Where Have All The Butterflies Gone? A new study of butterfly populations in the US shows a 22% decline among over 500 species in just 20 years.

A new study found that U.S. butterfly populations dropped by 22% in just 20 years. Dr. Elise Zipkin and Dr. @nickhaddad.bsky.social join us to discuss what’s causing the decline and whether we can do anything about it.

07.03.2025 20:21 👍 176 🔁 52 💬 6 📌 4
In Mesoamerican cloud forests, such as this one in the El Triunfo Biosphere Reserve in Mexico, climate change and deforestation are leading to plant species moving upslope. However, an analysis of forest plant traits from across the tropical Americas suggests that forests are not changing fast enough to keep up with climate change.

In Mesoamerican cloud forests, such as this one in the El Triunfo Biosphere Reserve in Mexico, climate change and deforestation are leading to plant species moving upslope. However, an analysis of forest plant traits from across the tropical Americas suggests that forests are not changing fast enough to keep up with climate change.

An analysis of forest plant traits from across the tropical Americas suggests that forests are not changing fast enough to keep up with #ClimateChange.

Learn more in this week's issue of Science: scim.ag/3QLYhyc

06.03.2025 19:05 👍 167 🔁 53 💬 0 📌 11
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Call for a critical review of widespread use of animal tracking devices - European Journal of Wildlife Research Animal tracking has undergone a technological revolution, providing insight into biological details that were previously impossible to address. However, the increasing ease of access to tracking devic...

In collaboration with my friend
@juanma-pg.bsky.social
we have just published this article about some worrying trends we have observed in the marking of animals with GPS .... 1/n link.springer.com/article/10.1...

02.03.2025 19:49 👍 48 🔁 22 💬 2 📌 0

Enhorabuena!!

21.02.2025 21:13 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
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El grupo de Ecoinformática de la AEET @ecoinf-aeet.bsky.social estrena página web:

ecoinfaeet.github.io

18.02.2025 08:45 👍 9 🔁 8 💬 0 📌 0
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📖Published📖

Denelle et al. present bioregion, a package that includes all the steps of a bioregionalization workflow under a single architecture 🌎 🧪 Read more here 👇

https://buff.ly/3CHqC5p

19.02.2025 12:00 👍 41 🔁 14 💬 1 📌 1
List of PhD projects currently being (co)advertised in the McFadden Lab, with an image of the earth surrounded by emoji of animals and plants, as well as the UKRI NERC and China Scholarship Council logos.

List of PhD projects currently being (co)advertised in the McFadden Lab, with an image of the earth surrounded by emoji of animals and plants, as well as the UKRI NERC and China Scholarship Council logos.

📣 Jobs alert- please share!

4(!) PhD positions on topics including species interactions, AI, global mapping and tropical ecology 🫐🌿🌸🍄🌏

PhD 1: bit.ly/TREES-Mappin... (w/ UCL East)
PhD 2: bit.ly/TREES-CV-4-I... (w/ UCL East)
PhD 3: bit.ly/TREES-Megadi... (w/ Kew Gardens)
PhD 4: bit.ly/4i35cj5 (CSC)

17.12.2024 16:20 👍 12 🔁 15 💬 0 📌 1
Downscaling mutualistic networks from species to individuals reveals consistent interaction niches and roles within plant populations

Species-level networks emerge as the combination of interactions spanning multiple individuals, and their study has received considerable attention over the past 30 y. However, less is known about the structure of interaction configurations within species, even though individuals are the actual interacting units in nature. We compiled 46 empirical, individual-based, interaction networks on plant-animal seed dispersal mutualisms, comprising 1,037 plant individuals across 29 species from various regions. We compared the structure of individual-based networks to that of species-based networks and, by extending the niche concept to interaction assemblages, we explored individual plant specialization. Using a Bayesian framework to account for uncertainty derived from sampling, we examined how plant individuals “explore” the interaction niche of their populations. Both individual-based and species-based networks exhibited high variability in network properties, lacking remarkable structural and topological differences between them. Within populations, frugivores’ interaction allocation among plant individuals was highly heterogeneous, with one to three frugivore species dominating interactions. Regardless of species or bioregion, plant individuals displayed a variety of interaction profiles across populations, with a consistently-small percentage of individuals playing a central role and exhibiting high diversity in their interaction assemblage. Plant populations showed variable mid to low levels of niche specialization; and individuals’ interaction niche “breadth” accounted for 70% of the population interaction diversity, on average. Our results highlight how downscaling from species to individual-based networks helps understanding the structuring of interactions within ecological communities.

Downscaling mutualistic networks from species to individuals reveals consistent interaction niches and roles within plant populations Species-level networks emerge as the combination of interactions spanning multiple individuals, and their study has received considerable attention over the past 30 y. However, less is known about the structure of interaction configurations within species, even though individuals are the actual interacting units in nature. We compiled 46 empirical, individual-based, interaction networks on plant-animal seed dispersal mutualisms, comprising 1,037 plant individuals across 29 species from various regions. We compared the structure of individual-based networks to that of species-based networks and, by extending the niche concept to interaction assemblages, we explored individual plant specialization. Using a Bayesian framework to account for uncertainty derived from sampling, we examined how plant individuals “explore” the interaction niche of their populations. Both individual-based and species-based networks exhibited high variability in network properties, lacking remarkable structural and topological differences between them. Within populations, frugivores’ interaction allocation among plant individuals was highly heterogeneous, with one to three frugivore species dominating interactions. Regardless of species or bioregion, plant individuals displayed a variety of interaction profiles across populations, with a consistently-small percentage of individuals playing a central role and exhibiting high diversity in their interaction assemblage. Plant populations showed variable mid to low levels of niche specialization; and individuals’ interaction niche “breadth” accounted for 70% of the population interaction diversity, on average. Our results highlight how downscaling from species to individual-based networks helps understanding the structuring of interactions within ecological communities.

1/ New paper @pnas.org on the structure of mutualistic #networks between individuals plants and frugivore species.

Last chapter of @elequintero.bsky.social's PhD thesis

doi.org/10.1073/pnas... #ecopubs

19.02.2025 14:32 👍 44 🔁 12 💬 2 📌 0

Exciting opportunity ahead! Join our workshop from April 2nd to 4th and discover how to calibrate both mechanistic and hybrid species distribution models. Don't miss out—register now!
@biogeography.bsky.social
@jgrubalcaba.bsky.social

18.02.2025 19:26 👍 18 🔁 9 💬 0 📌 0
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Concerned about the conservation of migrant birds?
Blog from last month may be of interest.
wadertales.wordpress.com/2025/01/09/h...
@amigodeaves.bsky.social paper explains how to bring ringing, colour-ring and tracking data together, to identify key migration sites.
#ConservationScience🌏

13.02.2025 08:37 👍 19 🔁 8 💬 1 📌 0
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GitHub - bluegreen-labs/ecmwfr: Interface to the public ECMWF API Web Services Interface to the public ECMWF API Web Services. Contribute to bluegreen-labs/ecmwfr development by creating an account on GitHub.

New release of the {ecmwfr} R package to query the Copernicus ECMWF data store. Most prominently fixes a dynamic file renaming issue as the API returns variable formats, depending on the requested data.

https://github.com/bluegreen-labs/ecmwfr

#rstats #climatedata #opendata #package

10.02.2025 12:03 👍 7 🔁 3 💬 1 📌 0
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The cherry blossom prediction competition is on again this year. Submissions due by end of February. I am very much too busy to participate unfortunately. But a good distraction from *gestures all around* for the rest of you perhaps. competition.statistics.gmu.edu/competition-...

10.02.2025 08:04 👍 82 🔁 18 💬 2 📌 1
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{tinyplot} 0.3.0 is out! 🚨

It's a lightweight #Rstats 📦 to draw beautiful and complex plots, using an ultra-simple and concise syntax.

This is a massive release! @gmcd.bsky.social @zeileis.org and I worked hard to add tons of new themes and plot types.

Check it out!

grantmcdermott.com/tinyplot/

05.02.2025 21:48 👍 492 🔁 113 💬 17 📌 12
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Dos leones en la Corte del Rey Felipe VI - Nortes | Centradas en la periferia El próximo mes de marzo se cumplirán ciento sesenta y cinco años de la batalla de Wad-Ras, un formidable pitote en el que se enfrentaron tropas españolas al mando de O’donnell con las del Sultanato de...

Ya os dije que lo de @nortes1.bsky.social esta semana iba de leones.
www.nortes.me/2025/02/01/d...

01.02.2025 07:00 👍 17 🔁 9 💬 5 📌 3
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Climate change aggravates bird mortality in pristine tropical forests Climate change threatens Amazon rainforest birds, with harsher dry seasons significantly affecting their survival over 27 years.

Papers like this really underscore the importance of long term monitoring datasets for understanding climate change impacts on biodiversity... And highlight the dire consequences of even modest temperature increases. 🧪🌍🦤🦜

www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...

31.01.2025 18:03 👍 144 🔁 56 💬 4 📌 1

Totalmente de acuerdo. Es precioso

28.01.2025 19:18 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
"Some land animals embark on epic migration journeys, covering hundreds of kilometers over time as they move between feeding grounds, safer habitats with fewer predators, and their home ranges.

This graphic visualizes the longest known land animal terrestrial migrations in kilometers.

The data comes from the study “Longest terrestrial migrations and movements around the world” by Joly, K., Gurarie, E., Sorum, M.S. et al. published in 2019."

https://www.visualcapitalist.com/ranked-land-animals-with-longest-migrations/

"Some land animals embark on epic migration journeys, covering hundreds of kilometers over time as they move between feeding grounds, safer habitats with fewer predators, and their home ranges. This graphic visualizes the longest known land animal terrestrial migrations in kilometers. The data comes from the study “Longest terrestrial migrations and movements around the world” by Joly, K., Gurarie, E., Sorum, M.S. et al. published in 2019." https://www.visualcapitalist.com/ranked-land-animals-with-longest-migrations/

Caribou traverse over 1,200km 🦌, while zebras cover ca 500km 🦓. Side by side, their journeys remind us how incredible and resilient the natural world 🌍 truly is. And this is terrestrial only.
#MigrationMasters #ProtectWildJourneys
#OvercomingBarriers

Paper from 2019: www.nature.com/articles/s41...

26.01.2025 08:50 👍 11 🔁 5 💬 0 📌 0