LA PESCA EN CASTILLA-LA MANCHA Temporada 2018
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Mito-Nuclear Sequencing Is Paramount to Correctly Identify Sympatric Hybridizing Fishes
ACTA ICHTHYOLOGICA ET PISCATORIA (2018) 48 (2): 123–141 DOI: 10.3750/AIEP/02348 MITO-NUCLEAR SEQUENCING IS PARAMOUNT TO CORRECTLY IDENTIFY SYMPATRIC HYBRIDIZING FISHES Carla SOUSA-SANTOS1*, Ana M. PEREIRA1, Paulo BRANCO2, Gonçalo J. COSTA3, José M. SANTOS2, Maria T. FERREIRA2, Cristina S. LIMA1, Ignacio DOADRIO4, and Joana I. ROBALO1 1 MARE—Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre, ISPA—Instituto Universitário, Lisboa, Portugal 2 CEF—Forest Research Centre, Instituto Superior de Agronomia, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal 3 Computational Biology and Population Genomics Group (CoBiG2), Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Changes (CE3C), Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal 4 Department of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, CSIC, Madrid, Spain Sousa-Santos C., Pereira A.M., Branco P., Costa G.J., Santos J.M., Ferreira M.T., Lima C.S., Doadrio I., Robalo J.I. 2018. Mito-nuclear sequencing is paramount to correctly identify sympatric hybridizing fishes. Acta Ichthyol. Piscat. 48 (2): 123–141. Background. Hybridization may drive speciation and erode species, especially when intrageneric sympatric species are involved. Five sympatric Luciobarbus species—Luciobarbus sclateri (Günther, 1868), Luciobarbus comizo (Steindachner, 1864), Luciobarbus microcephalus (Almaça, 1967), Luciobarbus guiraonis (Steindachner, 1866), and Luciobarbus steindachneri (Almaça, 1967)—are commonly identified in field surveys by diagnostic morphological characters. Assuming that i) in loco identification is subjective and observer-dependent, ii) there is previous evidence of interspecific hybridization, and iii) the technical reports usually do not include molecular analyses, our main goal was to assess the concordance between in loco species identification based on phenotypic characters with identifications based on morphometric indices, mtDNA only, and a combination of mito-nuclear markers. -
Recent Tectonic Model for the Upper Tagus Basin (Central Spain)
ISSN (print): 1698-6180. ISSN (online): 1886-7995 www.ucm.es/info/estratig/journal.htm Journal of Iberian Geology 38 (1) 2012: 113-126 http://dx.doi.org/10.5209/rev_JIGE.2012.v38.n1.39208 Recent tectonic model for the Upper Tagus Basin (central Spain) Modelo tectónico reciente de la Cuenca Alta del Tajo (parte central española) J.L. Giner-Robles*1, R. Pérez-López 2, P.G. Silva 3, A. Jiménez-Díaz 4, M.A. Rodríguez-Pascua 2 1 Dpto. Geología y Geoquímica. Facultad de Ciencias. Campus de Cantoblanco, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. 28049- Madrid, Spain. [email protected] 2 IGME – Instituto Geológico y Minero de España. Área de Investigación y Peligrosidad en Riesgos Geológicos C/ Ríos Rosas 23, 28003 Madrid, Spain [email protected], [email protected] 3 Dpto. Geología, Escuela Politécnica Superior de Ávila, Universidad de Salamanca. Avda. Hornos Caleros, 50. 05003-Ávila.España. Email: [email protected] 4 Dpto. de Geodinámica. Facultad de Ciencias Geológicas. Universidad Complutense de Madrid. 28040 - Madrid. España (Spain). Email: [email protected] *Corresponding author Received: 08/12/2011 / Accepted: 08/03/2012 Abstract Active tectonics within the Upper Tagus Basin is related to the lithospheric flexure affecting the Palaeozoic basement of the basin. This flexure displays NE-SW trending. Besides, this structure is in agreement with the regional active stress field defined by the maximum horizontal stress with NW-SE trending. In this tectonic framework, irregular clusters of instrumental seismicity (Mw< 5.0) fade in the zone bounded by the Tagus River and the Jarama River valleys. -
Presentación De Powerpoint
Monjes del Paular en Getafe 1 ª parte PRESENTACIÓN TALLER HABLEMOS DE GETAFE – CASA DEL MAYOR TALLER HABLEMOS DE GETAFE – CASA DEL MAYOR – 19-XII- 2013 Monjes del Paular en Getafe TALLER HABLEMOS DE GETAFE – CASA DEL MAYOR – 19-XII- 2013 TALLER HABLEMOS DE GETAFE – CASA DEL MAYOR – 19-XII- 2013 TALLER HABLEMOS DE GETAFE – CASA DEL MAYOR – 19-XII- 2013 Durante sus primeros cuatro siglos y medio de existencia, El Paular, concluido en 1442 bajo el reinado de Juan II y totalmente remodelado por Juan de Guas, arquitecto de los Reyes Católicos, se convirtió en una de las cartujas más poderosas del continente europeo, hasta el punto de que en 1515 pudo permitirse el lujo de costear la construcción de la cartuja de Granada. Su importancia económica fue notable, ya que disponía, entre otras fuentes de ingresos, de una cabaña real con 86.000 ovejas merinas y de su “molino de papel”, en el que se imprimió la editio princeps del Quijote. Sus posesiones rústicas y urbanas, agrupadas en torno a la Conrería situada en Talamanca del Jarama y en el señorío de Getafe (Madrid), eran inmensas, de tal modo que alguien las tituló con el sugerente mote de “ministerio de hacienda de los cartujos”. http://monasteriopaular.com/historiacartuja2.html http://www.foroxerbar.com/viewtopic.php?t=10326 TALLER HABLEMOS DE GETAFE – CASA DEL MAYOR – 19-XII- 2013 RELACIONES HISTÓRICO-GEOGRÁFICAS-ESTADÍSTICAS DE GETAFE MANDADAS HACER POR FELIPE II, SEGÚN EL INTERROGATORIO DE 1575 “ los edificios del pueblo casi todos son iguales en obras y materiales, salvo en hacer unos altos e otros bajos. -
ESR Dating of Middle Pleistocene Archaeo-Paleontological Sites from the Manzanares and Jarama River Valleys (Madrid Basin, Spain)
Quaternary International 520 (2019) 23e38 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Quaternary International journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/quaint ESR dating of Middle Pleistocene archaeo-paleontological sites from the Manzanares and Jarama river valleys (Madrid basin, Spain) * Davinia Moreno a, , Mathieu Duval b, Susana Rubio-Jara c, Joaquín Panera a, Jean Jacques Bahain d, Qingfeng Shao e, Alfredo Perez-Gonz alez a, Christophe Falgueres d a Centro Nacional de Investigacion sobre la Evolucion Humana (CENIEH), Paseo Sierra de Atapuerca, 3, 09002, Burgos, Spain b Australian Research Centre of Human Evolution (ARCHE), Environmental Futures Research Institute (EFRI), Griffith University, 170 Kessels Road, Nathan, QLD 4111, Australia c Instituto de Evolucion en Africa (IDEA), Museo de San Isidro, Plaza de San Andres, 2, Madrid, Spain d Departement de Prehistoire, Museum National d’Histoire Naturelle, UMR 7194, 1, Rue Rene Panhard, 75013, Paris, France e College of Geographical Science, Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing, 210023, China article info abstract Article history: In this work, three important Pleistocene sites of the Madrid basin located close to the junction of the Received 26 April 2017 Manzanares (PRERESA site) and the Jarama (Valdocarros site and Maresa quarry) rivers have been Received in revised form studied in order to improve the existing chronological framework of the basin and to clarify the 21 August 2017 geological evolution of these fluvial systems and their relationship with human occupations. To do so, Accepted 8 September 2017 Electron Spin Resonance (ESR) dating was applied to four fossil teeth and nine optically bleached quartz Available online 22 September 2017 grain samples. Most of the obtained dates are consistent with the existing preliminary age estimates by biostratigraphy, luminescence (OSL and TL) or Amino Acid Racemization (AAR) dating. -
Iberian Cyprinids: Habitat Requirements and Vulnerabilities
Session 1 Cyprinid species: ecology and constraints Iberian cyprinids: habitat requirements and vulnerabilities 2nd Stakeholder Workshop – Iberia – Lisboa, Portugal 20.03.2019 Francisco Godinho Hidroerg 20/03/2018 Francisco Godinho 1 Setting the scene 22/03/2018 Francisco Godinho 2 Relatively small river catchmentsIberian fluvial systems Douro/Duero is the largest one, with 97 600 km2 Loire – 117 000 km2, Rhinne -185 000 km2, Vistula – 194 000 km2, Danube22/03/2018 – 817 000 km2, Volga –Francisco 1 380 Godinho 000 km2 3 Most Iberian rivers present a mediterranean hydrological regime (temporary rivers are common) Vascão river, a tributary of the Guadiana river 22/03/2018 Francisco Godinho 4 Cyprinidae are the characteristic fish taxa of Iberian fluvial ecosystems, occurring from mountain streams (up to 1000 m in altitude) to lowland rivers Natural lakes are rare in the Iberian Peninsula and most natural freshwater bodies are rivers and streams 22/03/2018 Francisco Godinho 5 Six fish-based river types have been distinguished in Portugal (INAG and AFN, 2012) Type 1 - Northern salmonid streams Type 2 - Northern salmonid–cyprinid trans. streams Type 3 - Northern-interior medium-sized cyprinid streams Type 4 - Northern-interior medium-sized cyprinid streams Type 5 - Southern medium-sized cyprinid streams Type 6 - Northern-coastal cyprinid streams With the exception of assemblages in small northern, high altitude streams, native cyprinids dominate most unaltered fish assemblages, showing a high sucess in the hidrological singular 22/03/2018 -
Carla SOUSA-SANTOS1*, Ana M. PEREIRA1, Paulo BRANCO2, Gonçalo J
ACTA ICHTHYOLOGICA ET PISCATORIA (2018) 48 (2): 123–141 DOI: 10.3750/AIEP/2348 MITO-NUCLEAR SEQUENCING IS PARAMOUNT TO CORRECTLY IDENTIFY SYMPATRIC HYBRIDIZING FISHES Carla SOUSA-SANTOS1*, Ana M. PEREIRA1, Paulo BRANCO2, Gonçalo J. COSTA3, José M. SANTOS2, Maria T. FERREIRA2, Cristina M. LIMA1, Ignacio DOADRIO4, and Joana I. ROBALO1 1 MARE—Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre, ISPA—Instituto Universitário, Lisboa, Portugal 2 CEF—Forest Research Centre, Instituto Superior de Agronomia, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal 3 Computational Biology and Population Genomics Group (CoBiG2), Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Changes (CE3C), Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal 4 Department of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, CSIC, Madrid, Spain Sousa-Santos C., Pereira A.M., Branco P., Costa G.J., Santos J.M., Ferreira M.T., Lima C.S., Doadrio I., Robalo J.I. 2018. Mito-nuclear sequencing is paramount to correctly identify sympatric hybridizing fishes. Acta Ichthyol. Piscat. 48 (2): 123–141. Background. Hybridization may drive speciation and erode species, especially when intrageneric sympatric species are involved. Five sympatric Luciobarbus species—Luciobarbus sclateri (Günther, 1868), Luciobarbus comizo (Steindachner, 1864), Luciobarbus microcephalus (Almaça, 1967), Luciobarbus guiraonis (Steindachner, 1866), and Luciobarbus steindachneri (Almaça, 1967)—are commonly identified in field surveys by diagnostic morphological characters. Assuming that i) in loco identification is subjective and observer-dependent, ii) there is previous evidence of interspecific hybridization, and iii) the technical reports usually do not include molecular analyses, our main goal was to assess the concordance between in loco species identification based on phenotypic characters with identifications based on morphometric indices, mtDNA only, and a combination of mito-nuclear markers. -
Landscape-Based Fire Scenarios and Fire Types in the Ayllón Massif (Central Mountain Range, Spain), 19Th and 20Th Centuries1
Cuadernos de Investigación Geográfica 2020 Nº 46 (1) pp. 103-126 eISSN 1697-9540 Geographical Research Letters DOI: http://doi.org/10.18172/cig.3796 © Universidad de La Rioja LANDSCAPE-BASED FIRE SCENARIOS AND FIRE TYPES IN THE AYLLÓN MASSIF (CENTRAL MOUNTAIN RANGE, SPAIN), 19TH AND 20TH CENTURIES1 C.R. SEQUEIRA1*, C. MONTIEL-MOLINA1, F.C. REGO2 1Department of Geography, Faculty of Geography and History, Complutense University of Madrid, Spain. 2Centro de Ecologia Aplicada Prof. Baeta Neves, School of Agriculture, University of Lisbon, Portugal. ABSTRACT. Wildfires have been a major landscape disturbance factor throughout history in inland mountain areas of Spain. This paper aims to understand the interaction of fire regimes and landscape dynamics during the last two centuries within a socio-spatial context. The study area selected for this historical and spatial analysis is the Ayllón massif, in the Central Mountain Range. The theoretical background used to identify the driving forces of fire regime changes over the 19th and 20th centuries in this mountain area includes landscape-based fire scenarios and fire-type concepts. Both concepts have been addressed in recent studies from a spatial planning and fire management approach in an attempt to understand current fire landscapes and wildfire risk. However, this is the first time that these concepts have been applied to show that both spatial and temporal scales are crucial for an understanding of the current wildfire panorama, and that fire history related to landscape dynamics is fundamental in socio-spatial differences in fire regimes. Four variables (fire history, land use, population and settlement system, and forest management) were assessed to define historical landscape-based fire scenarios, and three fire feature variables (fire extent, fire cause, and spatial distribution pattern) were considered to define historical fire-types. -
Carla SOUSA-SANTOS1*, Ana M. PEREIRA1, Paulo BRANCO2, Gonçalo J
ACTA ICHTHYOLOGICA ET PISCATORIA (2018) 48 (2): 123–141 DOI: 10.3750/AIEP/02348 MITO-NUCLEAR SEQUENCING IS PARAMOUNT TO CORRECTLY IDENTIFY SYMPATRIC HYBRIDIZING FISHES Carla SOUSA-SANTOS1*, Ana M. PEREIRA1, Paulo BRANCO2, Gonçalo J. COSTA3, José M. SANTOS2, Maria T. FERREIRA2, Cristina S. LIMA1, Ignacio DOADRIO4, and Joana I. ROBALO1 1 MARE—Marine and Environmental Sciences Centre, ISPA—Instituto Universitário, Lisboa, Portugal 2 CEF—Forest Research Centre, Instituto Superior de Agronomia, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal 3 Computational Biology and Population Genomics Group (CoBiG2), Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Changes (CE3C), Faculdade de Ciências, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal 4 Department of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, CSIC, Madrid, Spain Sousa-Santos C., Pereira A.M., Branco P., Costa G.J., Santos J.M., Ferreira M.T., Lima C.S., Doadrio I., Robalo J.I. 2018. Mito-nuclear sequencing is paramount to correctly identify sympatric hybridizing fishes. Acta Ichthyol. Piscat. 48 (2): 123–141. Background. Hybridization may drive speciation and erode species, especially when intrageneric sympatric species are involved. Five sympatric Luciobarbus species—Luciobarbus sclateri (Günther, 1868), Luciobarbus comizo (Steindachner, 1864), Luciobarbus microcephalus (Almaça, 1967), Luciobarbus guiraonis (Steindachner, 1866), and Luciobarbus steindachneri (Almaça, 1967)—are commonly identified in field surveys by diagnostic morphological characters. Assuming that i) in loco identification is subjective and observer-dependent, ii) there is previous evidence of interspecific hybridization, and iii) the technical reports usually do not include molecular analyses, our main goal was to assess the concordance between in loco species identification based on phenotypic characters with identifications based on morphometric indices, mtDNA only, and a combination of mito-nuclear markers. -
Large Flake Acheulean in the Middle of Tagus Basin (Spain)
Quaternary International 411 (2016) 349e366 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Quaternary International journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/quaint Large flake Acheulean in the middle of Tagus basin (Spain): Middle stretch of the river Tagus valley and lower stretches of the rivers Jarama and Manzanares valleys * Susana Rubio-Jara a, Joaquín Panera b, , Juan Rodríguez-de-Tembleque c, Manuel Santonja b, Alfredo Perez-Gonz alez b a Instituto de Evolucion en Africa (I.D.E.A.), Museo de San Isidro, Plaza de San Andres 2, 28005 Madrid, Spain b Centro Nacional de Investigacion sobre la Evolucion Humana (C.E.N.I.E.H.), Paseo Sierra de Atapuerca, s/n, 09002 Burgos, Spain c Asociacion Nacional el Hombre y el Medio, Madrid, Spain article info abstract Article history: The highest concentration of Palaeolithic sites known in the Iberian Peninsula is located in the lower Available online 5 January 2016 stretches of the Manzanares and Jarama rivers. This area, together with a number of zones in the Tagus valley, constitutes one of the most important archives for the knowledge of the European Pleistocene. Keywords: The purpose of this paper is to establish the chronological frame and the technological strategies Pleistocene implemented in manufacturing lithic tools during the Acheulean techno-complex in the middle stretch Acheulean of the Tagus basin. Use of large flakes for making bifaces is common in the Acheulean assemblages from Palaeolithic this area, as well as in the rest of the Iberian Peninsula and the south of France. Tagus, Jarama and Manzanares rivers Iberian Peninsula The earliest Acheulean evidence has been dated to between MIS 15 and MIS 13. -
Orden-Pesca-2021-Anexo-Viii.Pdf
BOCM BOLETÍN OFICIAL DE LA COMUNIDAD DE MADRID B.O.C.M. Núm. 69 MARTES 23 DE MARZO DE 2021 Pág. 101 ANEXO VIII TRAMOS VEDADOS DE LA COMUNIDAD DE MADRID PARA EL AÑO 2021 Con independencia de los tramos Vedados incluidos en los acotados del anexo II, tendrán la consideración de inhábiles para la pesca los siguientes: - Los humedales catalogados de conformidad con la Ley 7/1990, de 28 de junio, de Protección de Embalses y Zonas Húmedas de la Comunidad de Madrid salvo los autorizados para la pesca en esta Orden y así señalizados para este fin. Cuenca del Duero: Río Duratón y sus arroyos dentro de la Comunidad de Madrid Cuenca del Tajo: El río Tajo, en el término municipal de Aranjuez, desde el punto señalizado en la parcela de ribera que limita la instalación del Centro Especializado de Tecnificación Deportiva de la Piragüera hasta el “Puente de Barcas”. Así como la zona denominada “la ría” desde el jardín de la isla hasta 100 metros antes del Puente de Hierro del ferrocarril. Subcuenca del Jarama: El primer tramo del río Jarama colindante con la provincia de Guadalajara (zona alta o cabecera del Jarama) en su zona truchera, hasta la confluencia del Arroyo de las Huelgas y con el objetivo de unificar criterios de gestión, se retrasa la apertura del período hábil de pesca al 1 de mayo manteniendo la misma fecha de cierre de la temporada de pesca truchera general el 18 de julio de 2021. En este tramo se considerará vedado para la pesca del cangrejo durante todo el año y finalizada la época truchera para cualquier especie. -
Large Flake Acheulean in the Middle of Tagus Basin (Spain)
Quaternary International xxx (2015) 1e18 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Quaternary International journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/quaint Large flake Acheulean in the middle of Tagus basin (Spain): Middle stretch of the river Tagus valley and lower stretches of the rivers Jarama and Manzanares valleys * Susana Rubio-Jara a, Joaquín Panera b, , Juan Rodríguez-de-Tembleque c, Manuel Santonja b, Alfredo Perez-Gonz alez b a Instituto de Evolucion en Africa (I.D.E.A.), Museo de San Isidro, Plaza de San Andres 2, 28005 Madrid, Spain b Centro Nacional de Investigacion sobre la Evolucion Humana (C.E.N.I.E.H.), Paseo Sierra de Atapuerca, s/n, 09002 Burgos, Spain c Asociacion Nacional el Hombre y el Medio, Madrid, Spain article info abstract Article history: The highest concentration of Palaeolithic sites known in the Iberian Peninsula is located in the lower Available online xxx stretches of the Manzanares and Jarama rivers. This area, together with a number of zones in the Tagus valley, constitutes one of the most important archives for the knowledge of the European Pleistocene. Keywords: The purpose of this paper is to establish the chronological frame and the technological strategies Pleistocene implemented in manufacturing lithic tools during the Acheulean techno-complex in the middle stretch Acheulean of the Tagus basin. Use of large flakes for making bifaces is common in the Acheulean assemblages from Palaeolithic this area, as well as in the rest of the Iberian Peninsula and the south of France. Tagus, Jarama and Manzanares rivers Iberian Peninsula The earliest Acheulean evidence has been dated to between MIS 15 and MIS 13. -
Precipitations and Floods in the Jarama- Tajo Basin (Central Spain) in the Late 16Th Century
Boletín de la AsociaciónPrecipitations de Geógrafos and floods Españoles in the Jarama-Tajo N.º 60 - 2012, basin págs. (central 441-443 Spain) in the late 16th century I.S.S.N.: 0212-9426 PRECIPITATIONS AND FLOODS IN THE JARAMA- TAJO BASIN (CENTRAL SPAIN) IN THE LATE 16TH CENTURY Teresa Bullón Mata Departamento de Geografía. Universidad Autónoma de Madrid [email protected] The study site is located in the centre of the Iberian Peninsula. It forms part of the basin of the river Jarama, a tributary of the river Tagus. This river drains the territory of Madrid and, at the southern border of the area, it joins with the Tagus. Some sections of the rivers studied possess a snow regime, as their heads are situated in mountain areas, and other sections present torrential drainage, with a high erosive capacity, as they start on flatlands and moors lying upon unconsolidated sediments, situated to the south of the mountains of the Central System. The current regulation system, with numerous reservoirs upriver, has modified the natural circulation of the waters. The numerous interventions and extractions of sand and gravel in the channels and on the riverbanks have eliminated many of the sediment records that had accumulated on the floodplain. The rivers present great mobility within the floodplains they have shaped. The land uses and other human actions developed in these riparian zones since at least medieval times have been adapted to the changing fluvial dynamics, and many of the events related thereto are reflected in written and graphic documents: «And the above mentioned Jarama river is therefore variable and tends to move away from its mother and flow elsewhere» (16th August, 1579.