All Fields
Computer Science
Medicine
FAQ
Contact
Sign in
Liolaemus pictus
Â
Topic mentions per year
Topic mentions per year
1988-2017
0
1
1988
2017
Papers overview
Semantic Scholar uses AI to extract papers important to this topic.
Review
2017
Review
2017
Geographic variation and acclimation effects on thermoregulation behavior in the widespread lizard Liolaemus pictus.
Paulina Artacho
,
Julia Saravia
,
Samuel Perret
,
José Luis Bartheld
,
Jean-François Le Galliard
Journal of thermal biology
2017
Populations at the warm range margins of the species distribution may be at the greatest risks of extinction from global warming…Â
(More)
Is this relevant?
2015
2015
Vulnerability to climate warming of Liolaemus pictus (Squamata, Liolaemidae), a lizard from the cold temperate climate in Patagonia, Argentina
Erika Leticia Kubisch
,
Jimena Beatriz Fernández
,
Nora R IbargüengoytÃa
Journal of Comparative Physiology B
2015
The vulnerability of populations and species to global warming depends not only on the environmental temperatures, but also on…Â
(More)
Is this relevant?
2012
2012
Lizards on Ice: Evidence for Multiple Refugia in Liolaemus pictus (Liolaemidae) during the Last Glacial Maximum in the Southern Andean Beech Forests
Iván Vera-Escalona
,
Guillermo D'elÃa
,
+4 authors
Pedro F. Victoriano
PloS one
2012
Historical climate changes and orogenesis are two important factors that have shaped intraspecific biodiversity patterns…Â
(More)
Is this relevant?
2010
2010
Stable isotopes document mainland-island divergence in resource use without concomitant physiological changes in the lizard Liolaemus pictus.
Marcela A. Vidal
,
Pablo Sabat
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. Part B…
2010
Shifts in feeding ecology are believed to promote island-mainland divergence. The lizard Liolaemus pictus has several different…Â
(More)
Is this relevant?
1988
1988
Microhabitat shifts of lizards under different contexts of sympatry: a case study with South American Liolaemus
Ricky Medel
,
Pierre Marquet
,
Fabian M. Jaksic
Oecologia
1988
The Iguanid lizard Liolaemus tenuis is shown to be a rock and trunk dweller (apparently preferring perches between 0–30 cm height…Â
(More)
Is this relevant?