Alfredo Pérez-Jiménez
National Autonomous University of Mexico
8 Papers
59 Citations
Alfredo Pérez-Jiménez is an academic researcher from National Autonomous University of Mexico. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests & Biology. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 8 publications. Previous affiliations of Alfredo Pérez-Jiménez include Sistema Nacional de Investigadores.
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Papers
Ecosystem Services of Tropical Dry Forests: Insights from Long-term Ecological and Social Research on the Pacific Coast of Mexico
J. Manuel Maass,Patricia Balvanera,Alicia Castillo,Gretchen C. Daily,Harold A. Mooney,Paul R. Ehrlich,Mauricio Quesada,Alvaro Miranda,Víctor J. Jaramillo,Felipe García-Oliva,Angelina Martínez-Yrízar,Helena Cotler,Jorge López-Blanco,Alfredo Pérez-Jiménez,Alberto Búrquez,Clara Tinoco,Gerardo Ceballos,Laura Barraza,Ricardo Ayala,José Sarukhán +19 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated the services delivered by a tropical dry forest (TDF) ecosystem in the Chamela Region, on the Pacific Coast of Mexico, using the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA) conceptual framework as a guide.
Above-ground phytomass of a tropical deciduous forest on the coast of Jalisco, México
Angelina Martínez-Yrízar,José Sarukhán,Alfredo Pérez-Jiménez,Emmanuel Rincón,Jose Manuel Maass,Arturo Solis-Magallanes,Luis Cervantes +6 more
TL;DR: PhytoImass was cleterminied for a tropical deciduotus forest in Chanmela Jalisco, N'6xico, and significant variance in the phytomass estiimiation was explained.
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Distribution Patterns of Tropical Dry Forest Trees Along a Mesoscale Water Availability Gradient
TL;DR: The results confirm the key role played by water availability in tree species distribution and suggest water-related niche differentiation seems to be crucial for maintaining the high diversity of this TDF.
91
Structure and diversity of secondary tropical dry forests in Mexico, differing in their prior land-use history
TL;DR: The structure and diversity of secondary tropical dry forests, growing in sites cleared by bulldozer 30 years ago and subjected to different land uses prior to abandonment, are compared.
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Testing Chronosequences through Dynamic Approaches: Time and Site Effects on Tropical Dry Forest Succession
Francisco Mora,Miguel Martínez-Ramos,Guillermo Ibarra-Manríquez,Alfredo Pérez-Jiménez,Jenny M. Trilleras,Patricia Balvanera +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a simple analytical approach combining both chronosequence and dynamic data to test the power of age of abandonment and site factors to explain and predict succession was developed by first fitting statistical models relating age to attribute values and their observed changes to test explanatory power.