J
José Luis Nieves-Aldrey
Researcher at Spanish National Research Council
Publications - 133
Citations - 4073
José Luis Nieves-Aldrey is an academic researcher from Spanish National Research Council. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gall & Cynipini. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 126 publications receiving 3753 citations. Previous affiliations of José Luis Nieves-Aldrey include University of Panama.
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Bayesian Phylogenetic Analysis of Combined Data
TL;DR: A Bayesian MCMC approach to the analysis of combined data sets was developed and its utility in inferring relationships among gall wasps based on data from morphology and four genes was explored, supporting the utility of morphological data in multigene analyses.
Introduccion a los Hymenoptera de la region Neotropical
TL;DR: Los primeros capitulos abordan aspectos generales (introducc ion, sisternatica, filogenia, morfologia, biologla, venenos, aspcctos economicos y biogeografia Neotropical).
Journal ArticleDOI
Phylogeny, evolution and classification of gall wasps: the plot thickens.
Fredrik Ronquist,José Luis Nieves-Aldrey,Matthew L. Buffington,Zhiwei Liu,Johan Liljeblad,Johan A. A. Nylander +5 more
TL;DR: The first comprehensive molecular and total-evidence analyses of higher-level gall wasp relationships confirm that gall wasps are conservative in their host-plant preferences, and that herb-galling lineages have radiated repeatedly onto the same set of unrelated host plants.
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A Fully Web-illustrated Morphological Phylogenetic Study of Relationships among Oak Gall wasps and their Closest Relatives (Hymenoptera: Cynipidae)
Johan Liljeblad,Fredrik Ronquist,José Luis Nieves-Aldrey,Félix Fontal-Cazalla,Palmira Ros-Farré,David Gaitros,Juli Pujade-Villar +6 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that WRG are conservative in their host plant preferences but there is no evidence for parallel insect-plant cladogenesis and distributional patterns suggest a possible origin for the oak gall wasps in the Nearctic but the picture is otherwise complicated.
Journal ArticleDOI
Reconstructing community assembly in time and space reveals enemy escape in a Western Palearctic insect community.
Graham N. Stone,Konrad Lohse,James A. Nicholls,Pablo Fuentes-Utrilla,Frazer Sinclair,Karsten Schönrogge,György Csóka,George Melika,José Luis Nieves-Aldrey,Juli Pujade-Villar,Majide Tavakoli,Richard R. Askew,Michael J. Hickerson,Michael J. Hickerson +13 more
TL;DR: Reintegration of parasitoids after host escape shows these communities to have been unsaturated throughout their history, arguing against major roles for parasitoid niche evolution or competition during community assembly.