C
Carlos Lopez-Vaamonde
Researcher at François Rabelais University
Publications - 109
Citations - 4266
Carlos Lopez-Vaamonde is an academic researcher from François Rabelais University. The author has contributed to research in topics: DNA barcoding & Gracillariidae. The author has an hindex of 32, co-authored 101 publications receiving 3710 citations. Previous affiliations of Carlos Lopez-Vaamonde include University of A Coruña & CABI.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Ecological effects of invasive alien insects
Marc Kenis,Marie-Anne Auger-Rozenberg,Alain Roques,Laura L. Timms,Christelle Péré,Matthew J.W. Cock,Josef Settele,Sylvie Augustin,Carlos Lopez-Vaamonde +8 more
TL;DR: The effects caused by different insect invaders are reviewed according to their ecosystem roles, i.e. herbivores, predators, parasites, parasitoids and pollinators; the level of biological organisation at which they occur; and the direct and indirect mechanisms underlying these effects.
Journal ArticleDOI
An Extreme Case of Plant–Insect Codiversification: Figs and Fig-Pollinating Wasps
Astrid Cruaud,Nina Rønsted,Nina Rønsted,Nina Rønsted,Bhanumas Chantarasuwan,Lien-Siang Chou,Wendy L. Clement,Wendy L. Clement,Arnaud Couloux,Benjamin R. Cousins,Gwenaëlle Genson,Rhett D. Harrison,Paul C. Hanson,Martine Hossaert-McKey,Roula Jabbour-Zahab,Emmanuelle Jousselin,Carole Kerdelhué,Finn Kjellberg,Carlos Lopez-Vaamonde,John Peebles,Yan-Qiong Peng,Rodrigo Augusto Santinelo Pereira,Tselil Schramm,Rosichon Ubaidillah,Simon Van Noort,George D. Weiblen,Da-Rong Yang,Anak Yodpinyanee,Ran Libeskind-Hadas,James M. Cook,Jean-Yves Rasplus,Vincent Savolainen,Vincent Savolainen +32 more
TL;DR: Biogeographic analyses indicate that the present-day distribution of fig and pollinator lineages is consistent with a Eurasian origin and subsequent dispersal, rather than with Gondwanan vicariance.
Book ChapterDOI
Alien Terrestrial Invertebrates of Europe
Alain Roques,Wolfgang Rabitsch,Jean-Yves Rasplus,Carlos Lopez-Vaamonde,Wolfgang Nentwig,Marc Kenis +5 more
TL;DR: The DAISIE project as mentioned in this paper gathered taxonomists and ecologists specialised on most invertebrate taxa together with collaborators working at the national level in 35 European countries to fill this gap.
Journal ArticleDOI
Social parasitism by male-producing reproductive workers in a eusocial insect.
TL;DR: It is shown that workers of a eusocial bumble bee (Bombus terrestris) enter unrelated, conspecific colonies in which they then produce adult male offspring, and that such socially parasitic workers reproduce earlier and are significantly more reproductive and aggressive than resident workers that reproduce within their own colonies.