Jaime Resano-Mayor

Jaime Resano-Mayor
  • PhD
  • PostDoc Position at University of Bern

About

22
Publications
6,497
Reads
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410
Citations
Current institution
University of Bern
Current position
  • PostDoc Position
Additional affiliations
September 2008 - July 2014
University of Barcelona
Position
  • Master and PhD student

Publications

Publications (22)
Article
Full-text available
Inter-individual diet variation within populations is likely to have important ecological and evolutionary implications. The diet-fitness relationships at the individual level and the emerging population processes are, however, poorly understood for most avian predators inhabiting complex terrestrial ecosystems. In this study, we use an isotopic ap...
Article
Full-text available
The recognition of individual variation has fundamental implications for ecological, evolutionary and biodiversity conservation. There is increasing theoretical interest in how spatial and temporal variation in the environment can create differences in the demographic contribution of individuals over space and time. However, empirical information a...
Article
Full-text available
Artificial food subsidies like landfills generate very strong impacts on animal ecology and spatial behavior. Landfills indeed have been considered to be one of the most influential factors explaining the very fast recovery of many colonial waterbird populations worldwide, as documented for the white stork Ciconia ciconia. More recently, the increa...
Article
Full-text available
Linking organism distribution to climate is key to understanding factors determining species occurrence and evaluating the potential impacts of ongoing climate change. A common analytical tool to assess the link between species and climate is represented by ecological niche modelling and by the tightly related species distribution models (SDMs). Th...
Article
Morphometric methods of sex differentiation may be cheap, simple, quick, and reliable alternatives to molecular approaches. However, there are still important uncertainties regarding the use of morphometric methods in birds, particularly regarding their applicability to different populations and environmental conditions. Between 2004 and 2019, we s...
Article
Full-text available
Many animals make behavioural changes to cope with winter conditions, being gregariousness a common strategy. Several factors have been invoked to explain why gregariousness may evolve during winter, with individuals coming together and separating as they trade off the different costs and benefits of living in groups. These trade-offs may, however,...
Article
Full-text available
The white stork Ciconia ciconia is one of the most emblematic birds in rural habitats of Europe. Its populations showed a drastic decline during the 20th century, followed by a rapid recovery in the last decades. The population increase has led to a relaxation in the specie’s monitoring effort, the last Spanish national official census having been...
Article
Full-text available
Seasonal movements are a response to variability in resource availability and result from a complex interaction between the behavioral and physiological traits of a species and its prevailing environment. A widespread bird migration strategy is partial latitudinal migration, where some proportion of the population moves from breeding to winter grou...
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The White-winged Snowfinch Montifringilla nivalis nivalis is assumed to be highly threatened by climate change, but this high elevation species has been little studied and the current breeding distribution is accurately known only for a minor portion of its range. Here, we provide a detailed and spatially explicit identification of the potentially...
Article
Full-text available
High-alpine ecosystems are strongly seasonal and adverse environments. In these ecosystems, the brevity of optimal breeding conditions means species must efficiently track spatiotemporal variations in resources in order to synchronise their reproductive effort with peaks in food availability. Understanding the details of prey-habitat associations a...
Article
Species inhabiting mountain ecosystems are expected to be particularly vulnerable to environmental change, yet information on their basic ecology is often lacking. Knowledge from field‐based empirical studies remains essential to refine our understanding of the impact of current habitat alterations and for the consequential development of meaningfu...
Article
The majority of predictions about the impacts of climate change on wildlife have relied either on the study of species' physiological tolerance or on broad-scale distribution models. In comparison, little attention has been paid to species' mechanistic responses to fine-grained, climate-induced modifications of habitat suitability. However, such st...
Article
Open landfills seem to be playing an increasing role as target feeding areas for several species, not only in their breeding areas or during the winter, but also during the migration period. Evaluating the extent to which landfill sites are used by migrants is crucial to understanding their role in driving stopover decisions during migration, and i...
Article
Full-text available
The population structure and seasonal movements of alpine birds in Europe are still largely unknown. Species living in high mountains now face acute risks of habitat loss, range contractions and local extinction due to current and projected climate change. Therefore, a better understanding of the spatial structuring and exchange among populations o...
Article
Full-text available
Animal body condition refers to the health and physiological state of individuals, and multiple parameters have been proposed to quantify this key concept. Food intake is one of the main determinants of individual body condition and much debate has been generated on how diet relates to body condition. We investigated this relationship in free-livin...
Article
Diet analyses are central to the study of avian trophic ecology, and stable isotope analyses have made an increasing contribution in the last two decades. Few isotopic studies have assessed the diet of raptor species, which are more frequently analysed by conventional diet methods such as pellet analysis. In this study, we compare prey consumption...
Article
Full-text available
Bonelli's Eagle (Aquila fasciata) is one of the most endangered raptor species in Europe due to high adult and subadult mortality rates, habitat loss, and a decrease in populations of its most important prey, European rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) and Red-legged Partridges (Alectoris rufa). During the breeding season of 2008, we studied the diet...

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