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Camilo Salazar

Researcher at Del Rosario University

Publications -  88
Citations -  6807

Camilo Salazar is an academic researcher from Del Rosario University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Heliconius & Population. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 78 publications receiving 5688 citations. Previous affiliations of Camilo Salazar include Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute & Leibniz Association.

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A neotropical polymorphic damselfly shows poor congruence between genetic and traditional morphological characters in Odonata

TL;DR: Molecular data suggests two well-supported reciprocal monophyletic clades in Polythore procera populations in the Andean foothills of Colombia, which support a recent possible speciation with morphological stasis where unknown reproductive mechanisms may be involved.
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Müllerian mimicry of a quantitative trait despite contrasting levels of genomic divergence and selection

TL;DR: It is concluded that multiple factors are needed to explain patterns of clinal variation within and between these species, although mimicry has probably played a central role.
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Divergence promoted by the northern Andes in the giant fishing spider Ancylometes bogotensis (Araneae: Ctenidae)

TL;DR: The study reveals that the genetic structure of an arachnid species that has limited dispersal capacity and is highly dependent on water bodies is shaped by the Andean orogeny, and the generality of this observation remains to be assessed in other invertebrates.
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A molecular systematic analysis of the Neotropical banner winged damselflies (Polythoridae: Odonata)

TL;DR: An overview of the evolutionary history of the Neotropical damselfly family Polythoridae is presented, and the following new genus‐level classification are proposed: Chalcothore, Chalcopteryx, Cora s.l., Miocora, Euthore s.n., and Polythore.
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Gene flow and Andean uplift shape the diversification of Gasteracantha cancriformis (Araneae: Araneidae) in Northern South America

TL;DR: The final uplift of Eastern cordillera of the Colombian Andes was identified as the major force that shaped the diversification of G. cancriformis in Northern South America, resulting in a cis- and trans-Andean phylogeographic structure for the species.