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Dr. George-Nascimento-Failla, Mario
Nombre de publicación
Dr. George-Nascimento-Failla, Mario
Nombre completo
George-Nascimento, Mario Antonio
Facultad
Email
mgeorgen@ucsc.cl
ORCID
2 results
Research Outputs
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- PublicationLocal and regional variations in composition and aggregate properties of fish assemblages in rocky intertidal pools of the Chilean coast(Springer Nature, 2025)
; ;Muñoz, Gabriela ;Castro-Rojas, MauricioOjeda, F. PatricioWe assessed compositional and aggregate properties of fish assemblages inhabiting rocky intertidal pools of the coast of central Chile. Its association to sampling regions, localities, tidepool volume or dominant substrate was examined. A total of 1502 individual fish representing 20 species were collected in 49 single-time sampled tidepools from 3 localities at Valparaíso and 5 from the Biobío region. The dissimilarity in composition of the fish assemblages was larger between regions than among localities within regions. The most abundant taxa in Valparaíso were Helcogrammoides chilensis and Scartichthys viridis. In Biobío were Calliclinus geniguttatus, Gobiesox marmoratus, Myxodes viridis and Ophiogobius jenynsi. There were significant and positive but not strong correlations between the volume of tidepools with the total fish number and species richness. There were no significant correlations with dominance, diversity and total fish biomass. Consequently, density in biomass, density in number of fishes, and in number of species decreased similarly and steeply with tidepool volume in Valparaíso and Biobío regions, indicating a strong size effect of tidepool volume in both regions. These results indicate that community composition variability is independent of aggregate community and that a biogeographical compositional transition occurs in this area. - PublicationComparison of parasite diversity of intertidal fish assemblages from central California and central Chile(Revista de Biología Marina y Oceanografía, 2017)
; ;Fernández-Cisternas, ÍtaloOjeda, F. PatricioThe coasts of central Chile and central California are important points of comparison in the study of ecological convergence such as a host’s parasite load because of their similar environmental conditions and the shared presence of many families of different species. In this study, the diversity of parasites in fish species from both zones was analyzed and compared to establish if there are similarities between them. The presence of 6 taxonomic groups of parasites was determined using published literature and databases for each location. A presence-absence matrix was created for the fish species studied in Chile and California, and a similarity analysis was carried out to prove whether the parasite loads of both zones were similar. The parasite taxa most frequently found in fish in central California were Digenea and Nematoda, whereas in central Chile the common taxa were Digenea, Annelida, Copepoda, Acanthocephala, and Nematoda. The similarity analysis showed that the parasite composition was different between zones. Nevertheless, overlaps were obtained in the parasitic diversity grouping the host in 3 host groups, one of which consists of hosts from both zones. This difference can be explained by the low parasitic diversity in the assemble of rocky intertidal fishes in California, potentially due to the limited amount of existing studies on intertidal fish parasites in California, along with other possible factors not explored in the present study.