Jaime Anaya-Rojas

Affiliations: 
Aquatic Ecology Eawag 
Google:
"Jaime Anaya-Rojas"

Parents

Sign in to add mentor
Theo C M Bakker grad student
Blake Matthews grad student Eawag
Martha Patricia Ramirez-Pinilla grad student
Ole Seehausen grad student 2012-2017 Bern University
Joseph Travis grad student 2017-2020
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Anaya-Rojas JM, Bassar RD, Matthews B, et al. (2023) Does the Evolution of Ontogenetic Niche Shifts Favor Species Coexistence? An empirical test in Trinidadian streams. The Journal of Animal Ecology
Anaya-Rojas JM, Bassar RD, Potter T, et al. (2021) The evolution of size-dependent competitive interactions promotes species coexistence. The Journal of Animal Ecology
Leal MC, Anaya-Rojas JM, Munro MHG, et al. (2020) Fifty years of capacity building in the search for new marine natural products. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Anaya-Rojas JM, Best RJ, Brunner FS, et al. (2019) An experimental test of how parasites of predators can influence trophic cascades and ecosystem functioning. Ecology. e02744
Culumber ZW, Anaya-Rojas JM, Booker WW, et al. (2019) Widespread Biases in Ecological and Evolutionary Studies Bioscience. 69: 631-640
Best RJ, Anaya-Rojas JM, Leal MC, et al. (2017) Transgenerational selection driven by divergent ecological impacts of hybridizing lineages. Nature Ecology & Evolution
Brunner FS, Anaya-Rojas JM, Matthews B, et al. (2017) Experimental evidence that parasites drive eco-evolutionary feedbacks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Anaya-Rojas JM, Brunner FS, Sommer N, et al. (2016) The association of feeding behavior with the resistance and tolerance to parasites in recently diverged sticklebacks. Journal of Evolutionary Biology
Selz OM, Thommen R, Pierotti ME, et al. (2016) Differences in male coloration are predicted by divergent sexual selection between populations of a cichlid fish. Proceedings. Biological Sciences. 283
See more...