Juan Camilo Muñoz

ORCID: 0000-0002-0003-9285
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
  • Environmental and Cultural Studies in Latin America and Beyond
  • Land Use and Ecosystem Services
  • Plant and animal studies
  • Management and Marketing Education
  • Wildlife Ecology and Conservation
  • Sports and Physical Education Studies
  • Animal Ecology and Behavior Studies
  • Sports Performance and Training
  • Conservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management
  • Psychological Treatments and Disorders
  • Wildlife-Road Interactions and Conservation
  • Social Sciences and Policies
  • Plant Parasitism and Resistance
  • Aging, Health, and Disability
  • Occupational Health and Safety in Workplaces
  • Physical Education and Pedagogy
  • Mediterranean and Iberian flora and fauna
  • Species Distribution and Climate Change

KU Leuven
2013

Universidad de Los Andes
2013

Clínica CES
1998

Abstract Pervasive human impact in heavily transformed landscapes may lead disturbance‐adapted species to thrive, resulting floristic homogenization across forest stands. However, environmental heterogeneity and dispersal limitation be antagonistic forces homogenization, maintaining inherent differentiation sites. We evaluated the extent which peri‐urban Andean forests are undergoing both late‐ early‐successional considered seedling assemblages as well, they provide key insights into...

10.1111/1365-2745.13570 article EN Journal of Ecology 2020-12-19

Abstract Urbanization can profoundly disrupt local ecology. But while urban areas now stretch across latitudes, little is known about urbanization’s effects on macroecological patterns. We used standardized experiments to test whether urbanization disrupts latitudinal gradients in seed predation, a pattern that shapes community assembly and diversity. Using >56,000 seeds, we compared predation urbanized natural 14,000 km of latitude, spanning the Americas. Predation increased 5-fold from...

10.1101/2023.11.14.566324 preprint EN cc-by-nc-nd bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) 2023-11-16

Más de la mitad los bosques tropicales corresponden a sucesionales, producto regeneración natural que ocurre espontáneamente, una vez han cesado actividades humanas en un terreno. El proceso sucesional rige recuperación estructura y composición está determinado por diversos factores operan simultáneamente diferentes escalas se relacionan maneras complejas. Estas contingencias conducen hacia trayectorias sucesionales impredecibles cada sitio. En Colombia, hacen parte integral del paisaje, su...

10.15446/caldasia.v44n2.82255 article ES cc-by Caldasia 2022-06-24
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