Browsing by Author "e0cadc00-5aef-4364-845c-abe1cb9d79eb"
Now showing items 41-46 of 46
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Naya, Daniel E.; Veloso Iriarte, Claudio; Sabat Opazo, Pablo; Bozinovic, Francisco (2009)Hibernation in ectothermic animals was historically considered as a simple cold-induced torpor state resulting from the inability to maintain a high body temperature at low ambient temperatures. During the last decades ...
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Sabat Kirkwood, Alejandro Pablo; Bozinovic, Francisco; Contreras-Ramos, Carolina; Nespolo, Roberto F.; Newsome, Seth D.; Quirici, Veronica; Maldonado, Karin; Peña-Villalobos, Isaac; Ramirez-Otarola, Natalia; Sanchez-Hernandez, Juan Carlos (Elsevier Inc., 2019)© 2019 Elsevier Inc.Physiological traits associated with maintenance, growth, and reproduction demand a large amount of energy and thus directly influence an animal's energy budget, which is also regulated by environmental ...
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Boher, Francisca; Godoy-Herrera, Raúl; Bozinovic, Francisco (2010)Background: Physiological tolerances are important determinants of the biogeography of species. Questions: What is the relationship between thermal tolerance and the biogeographic origin of species? What are the relationships ...
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Nespolo, Roberto F.; Opazo, Juan C.; Rosenmann, Mario; Bozinovic, Francisco (Allen Press Inc., 1999)We determined non-shivering thermogensis (NST) and maximum metabolic rate (MMR) as functions of thermal acclimation in a small mammal species in a seasonal environment. We studied the rodent Phyllotis xanthopygus (Muridae) ...
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Bozinovic, Francisco; Medina, Nadia R.; Alruiz, José M.; Cavieres, Grisel; Sabat, Rodrigo (Springer, 2016)Climate change poses one of the greatest threats to biodiversity. Most analyses of the impacts have focused on changes in mean temperature, but increasing variance will also impact organisms and populations. We assessed ...
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Maldonado, Karin; Bozinovic, Francisco; Rojas, José M.; Sabat Kirkwood, Alejandro Pablo (2011)The climatic variability hypothesis (CVH) states that species are geographically more widespread at higher latitudes because individuals have a broader range of physiological tolerance or phenotypic flexibility as latitude ...