Now showing items 1-4 of 4

    • Fan, Ruiwen; Gu, Zhongru; Guang, Xuanmin; Marín, Juan Carlos; Varas, Valeria; González Pérez, Benito; Wheeler, Jane C.; Hu, Yafei; Li, Elri; Sun, Xiaohui; Yang, Xukui; Zhang, Chi; Gao, Wenjun; He, Junping; Munch, Kasper; Corbett-Detig, Russel; Barbato, Mario; Pan, Shengkai; Zhan, Xiangjiang; Bruford, Michael W.; Dong, Changsheng (BMC, 2020)
      Background Despite their regional economic importance and being increasingly reared globally, the origins and evolution of the llama and alpaca remain poorly understood. Here we report reference genomes for the llama, and ...
    • Marín, Juan C.; Spotorno Oyarzún, Ángel; González, Benito A.; Bonacic, Cristian; Wheeler, Jane C.; Casey, Ciara S.; Bruford, Michael W.; Palma, R. Eduardo; Poulin, Elie (2008)
      Guanacos (Lama guanicoe) are the most important native herbivorous species in the South American steppes and the dominant ungulate in a fauna rich in rodents but poor in large mammal species. Between 2 and 4 subspecies are ...
    • Marín, Juan C.; Zapata, Beatriz; González, Benito A.; Bonacic, Cristian; Wheeler, Jane C.; Casey, Ciara; Bruford, Michael W.; Palma, R. Eduardo; Poulin, Elie; Alliende, M. Angélica; Spotorno, Ángel E. (2007)
      Four camelid species exist in South America: two wild, the guanaco (Lama guanicoe) and the vicuña (Vicugna vicugna), and two domestic, the alpaca (Lama pacos) and the llama (Lama glama). However, the origin of the domestic ...
    • Fontúrbel, Francisco E.; Bruford, Michael W.; Salazar, Daniela A.; Cortés-Miranda, Jorge; Vega-Retter, Caren (Elsevier B.V., 2019)
      © 2018 Elsevier B.V. Land use change is one of the most important anthropogenic drivers of biodiversity loss. Nevertheless, the ecological and evolutionary consequences of habitat transformation remain less understood than ...