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Posts by Sara Gamboa

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25N 2025. El precio del conocimiento: recordar a las mujeres que dejaron la vida por la ciencia En el Día Internacional para la Eliminación de la Violencia contra las Mujeres 25N, recordamos también a aquellas que murieron en el ejercicio de su labor científica o técnica, en contextos donde l…

Hoy #25N, la Comisión de Igualdad de la AEET recuerda en el #BlogAEET a las mujeres que dejaron la vida por la ciencia.

blogaeet.org/2025/11/25/2...

4 months ago 24 21 1 1
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Naixement d'eruga de Charaxes jasius. 30 minuts comprimits a menys de 2

6 months ago 18 4 0 0

as a girl with a PhD in natural language processing and machine learning it's actually offensive to me when you say "we don't know how LLMs work so they might be conscious"

I didn't spend 10 years in mines of academia to be told ignorance is morally equal knowledge.

We know exactly how LLMs work.

6 months ago 5779 1584 65 66
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Thrilled that our paper “The division of food space among mammalian species on biomes” has been selected as October’s Editor’s Choice in @ecography.bsky.social ! 📰✨👇 sl1nk.com/AG7BC

Huge thanks to Rafa Barrientos for the pic (I mean, Rafa is the photographer, not the stunning monkey 🐒)

6 months ago 7 3 1 0

Thrilled to welcome @paleobicha.bsky.social to the ZNS @unihalle.bsky.social! Excited for our collaboration 🦋🏝

6 months ago 3 2 0 0
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Excited to announce that I’m joining the Halle (Saale) ZNS-@unihalle.bsky.social, where I’ll be working on butterfly ecology and evolution with the brilliant @robertorozzi.bsky.social, thanks to a @fundacionareces.bsky.social fellowship!

Already covered in gifts on my first day 🎁🦋

6 months ago 9 2 1 1
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The division of food space among mammalian species on biomes vist.ly/4746f #Macroecology #Specialista #Diet

7 months ago 6 2 1 0
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Peng et al. - Descending from trees: a Cretaceous winged ice-crawler illuminates the ecological shift and origin of Grylloblattidae

doi.org/10.1098/rspb...

9 months ago 2 1 0 0
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The division of food space among mammalian species on biomes Understanding how species' ecological partitioning functions across biomes is fundamental to macroecology and conservation biology. Here, we examine the global distribution of dietary strategies in t...

Read the full paper here, open access:
🔗 doi.org/10.1002/ecog...
By Sara Gamboa, Sofía Galván, @marsobral.bsky.social
@hdezfdez.bsky.social & @saravarela.bsky.social

📊 Over 3600 mammal species
🌍 10 global biomes
🍽️ A global buffet.

#Macroecology #FunctionalEcology #Mammals #TrophicEcology

9 months ago 4 2 0 0
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If we care about conserving function, not just species, we need to know:

📌Who’s irreplaceable?
⛓️Who’s holding the structure together?
🧩And what happens when environments shift faster than species can move?
This is what functional ecology must answer.

9 months ago 2 0 1 0

In the end, our study shows this:

Species don’t just divide the world by where they live.
They divide it by what they eat, and how they access that food over time and space.

Ecological roles aren’t just about traits.
They’re about context.

9 months ago 1 0 1 0

Extreme generalists, species found in more than 4 biomes, often had narrower, carnivorous or insectivorous diets

It's not broad omnivory. It’s mobile predation.
A different kind of generalism. 🕷️🐭

9 months ago 1 0 1 0
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a cartoon character with horns and a makeagif.com url ALT: a cartoon character with horns and a makeagif.com url

Our results show that many specialists are vulnerable, but also somewhat replaceable.
Meanwhile, moderate generalists are the real keystones.

They fill the space, link ecosystems, and stabilize food webs.
They’re not flashy, but they hold the fort.

9 months ago 1 0 1 0

🧩 Functional redundancy matters.
If many species do similar things, ecosystems are buffered. If one is lost, another can take its place.

That redundancy is a kind of ecological insurance.
🛟🛠️

9 months ago 1 0 1 0

In productive biomes like rainforests, there’s space for everyone. Specialists and generalists alike, all coexisting in dense, redundant networks.

But in harsher biomes, the story changes.
Specialists shrink. Generalists step in.
And trophic diversity becomes fragile.

9 months ago 1 0 1 0
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a blue beetle is crawling on a tree branch . ALT: a blue beetle is crawling on a tree branch .

Specialists?
They often occupy dietary roles already covered by generalists.

Yes, a few have truly unique diets—ecological “weirdos” with no substitutes.

But most specialists are nested within generalist space.
Their diets are rarer, but not necessarily novel.

9 months ago 1 0 1 0
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alice from alice in wonderland is reaching for a box that says " eat me " ALT: alice from alice in wonderland is reaching for a box that says " eat me "

The answer: generalists dominate.
Especially moderate generalists.
They take up most of the trophic space in every biome, even in extreme environments like tundra or taiga. ❄️
They're the flexible backbone of global mammal communities.

9 months ago 2 0 1 0
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We built a multivariate map of diet space—what we call the “trophic niche”—for all these species.
Then we projected it across ten global biomes:
from lush tropical forests to frozen tundra.
How full is the dietary space in each biome?
And who’s filling it?

9 months ago 2 0 1 0
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A biome specialist must find everything it needs in one type of ecosystem.
Rain or drought. Summer or winter☀️🌩️❄️.
If resources run out, there’s nowhere else to go.
Generalists, by contrast, can follow the seasons or shift habitats.
More options, more resilience. 🌍

9 months ago 2 0 1 0

So we grouped mammals based on biome specialization:
🔴 Specialists – live in only one biome
🟡 Moderate generalists – live in 2–4 biomes
🔵 Extreme generalists – 5 or more
This isn’t about dietary generalism.
A species can have a narrow diet and still thrive in many environments

9 months ago 2 0 1 0
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a monkey is standing next to a bowl of fruit . ALT: a monkey is standing next to a bowl of fruit .

Because eating fruit in a rainforest🌿🌺 is not the same as eating fruit in a desert 🌵, especially when your environment only offers food part of the year 🥝🍇.

9 months ago 1 0 1 0

We looked at ~3,600 terrestrial mammals 🐒🦫🦒.
And we didn’t classify them by what they eat.
We first asked: how many biomes does each species live in?

9 months ago 1 0 1 0
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The division of food space among mammalian species on biomes Understanding how species' ecological partitioning functions across biomes is fundamental to macroecology and conservation biology. Here, we examine the global distribution of dietary strategies in t...

In our new paper, we asked:

Who eats what — and where — across the world’s biomes?
How does being a specialist or a generalist affect that?
And what that means for biodiversity?
🔍🦓🌍

nsojournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...

9 months ago 2 0 1 0
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a cartoon rat is holding a sandwich and a piece of fruit ALT: a cartoon rat is holding a sandwich and a piece of fruit

ince then, macroecology has mapped thousands of global patterns:
🌿 species richness
🐋 body size
🌡️ climate tolerance

But one question has remained surprisingly underexplored:

How do mammals divide up the global buffet?

9 months ago 1 0 1 0
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🌍 What structures life on Earth?
In the 1980s, Brown and Maurer laid the foundations of macroecology with a simple, powerful idea:
space, time… and FOOD.

Where food is, how it's distributed, and who gets access to it.

9 months ago 5 1 1 0
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The division of food space among mammalian species on biomes Understanding how species' ecological partitioning functions across biomes is fundamental to macroecology and conservation biology. Here, we examine the global distribution of dietary strategies in t...

The division of food space among mammalian species on biomes
nsojournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
by @paleobicha.bsky.social‬ ‪et al.

9 months ago 1 1 0 0
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As always, super inspiring talk of @paleobicha.bsky.social at @sibecol-aeet-25.bsky.social

#SIBECOLAEET2025

10 months ago 5 1 0 0
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"Our field kits are better equiped for snake bites than for #menstruation". Very impacting presentation from @paleobicha.bsky.social explaining how we overlook menstruation in field work campaings. #SIBECOLAEET2025 @eco-aeet.bsky.social www.revistaecosistemas.net/index.php/ec...

10 months ago 3 1 0 0
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Congrats to Sofia and all co-authors from the MAPAS Lab! Sara Varela @paleobicha.bsky.social Adriana Oliver and Filippo Rotatori

10 months ago 1 1 0 0

Congrats to Sofia and all co-authors from the MAPAS Lab! Sara Varela @paleobicha.bsky.social Adriana Oliver and Filippo Rotatori

10 months ago 9 2 0 0