A
Alejandro R. Giraudo
Researcher at National Scientific and Technical Research Council
Publications - 56
Citations - 1131
Alejandro R. Giraudo is an academic researcher from National Scientific and Technical Research Council. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biodiversity & Biology. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 47 publications receiving 1000 citations. Previous affiliations of Alejandro R. Giraudo include National University of the Littoral.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Categorización del estado de conservación de los anfibios de la República Argentina
Walter S. Prado,Tomás Waller,Diego Albareda,Mario Roberto Cabrera,Eduardo Gabriel Etchepare,Alejandro R. Giraudo,Victoria González Carman,Laura Prosdocimi,Enrique Richard +8 more
TL;DR: Vaira et al. as mentioned in this paper presented a study of the relationship between Bio-Geography and Ingenieria at the Instituto de Bio and Geociencias del NOA.
Journal ArticleDOI
Atlas of Brazilian Snakes: Verified Point-Locality Maps to Mitigate the Wallacean Shortfall in a Megadiverse Snake Fauna
Cristiano Nogueira,Antônio Jorge Suzart Argôlo,Vanesa Arzamendia,Josué A. R. Azevedo,Fausto Erritto Barbo,Renato Silveira Bérnils,Bruna E. Bolochio,Márcio Borges-Martins,Marcela Brasil-Godinho,Henrique B. Braz,Marcus Augusto Buononato,Diego F. Cisneros-Heredia,Guarino R. Colli,Henrique Caldeira Costa,Francisco Luís Franco,Alejandro R. Giraudo,Rodrigo Castellari Gonzalez,Thaís B. Guedes,Marinus S. Hoogmoed,Otavio A. V. Marques,Giovanna Gondim Montingelli,Paulo Passos,Ana Lúcia da Costa Prudente,Gilson A. Rivas,Paola M. Sanchez,Filipe C. Serrano,Nelson J. Silva,Christine Strüssmann,João Paulo dos Santos Vieira-Alencar,Hussam Zaher,Ricardo J. Sawaya,Marcio Martins +31 more
TL;DR: The first comprehensive collection of detailed, voucher-based, point-locality, range maps for all described and documented Brazilian snakes is presented, with the major aim of mitigating the Wallacean shortfall and as a contribution towards a better understanding of this rich, threatened, and poorly studied megadiverse fauna.
Journal ArticleDOI
Detecting areas of endemism with a taxonomically diverse data set: plants, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, birds, and insects from Argentina
Claudia A. Szumik,Lone Aagesen,Dolores Casagranda,Vanesa Arzamendia,Diego Baldo,Lucia Elena Claps,Fabiana Cuezzo,Juan Manuel Díaz Gómez,Adrián S. Di Giacomo,Alejandro R. Giraudo,Pablo A. Goloboff,Cecilia Gramajo,Cecilia Kopuchian,Sonia Kretzschmar,Mercedes Lizarralde,Alejandra Molina,Marcos Mollerach,Fernando Navarro,Soledad Nomdedeu,Adela Panizza,Veronica Pereyra,María Leonor Sandoval,Gustavo J. Scrocchi,Fernando O. Zuloaga +23 more
TL;DR: This paper analyses an area of 1152 000 km2, between parallels 21 and 32°S and meridians 70 and 53°W to examine whether a large and taxonomically diverse data set actually displays areas supported by different groups.