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Leonardo Galetto

Researcher at National University of Cordoba

Publications -  187
Citations -  5078

Leonardo Galetto is an academic researcher from National University of Cordoba. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nectar & Pollinator. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 171 publications receiving 4349 citations. Previous affiliations of Leonardo Galetto include University of Córdoba (Spain) & National Scientific and Technical Research Council.

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Plant Reproductive Susceptibility to Habitat Fragmentation: Review and Synthesis Through a Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: A highly significant correlation between the effect sizes of fragmentation on pollination and reproductive success suggests that the most proximate cause of reproductive impairment in fragmented habitats may be pollination limitation.
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Diversity, threats and conservation of native bees in the Neotropics.

TL;DR: The Neotropics bee fauna is very rich with 5000 recognised species, including 33 genera (391 species) of Meliponini, but it is estimated to be at least three fold greater in species richness.
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Reproductive success in fragmented habitats: do compatibility systems and pollination specialization matter?

TL;DR: It is suggested that no generalizations can be made on susceptibility to fragmentation based on compatibility system and pollination specialization, and that self-incompatible species can offset their expected higher vulnerability to fragmentation by being, on average, more pollination generalist than self-compatible species.
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Why do pollination generalist and specialist plant species show similar reproductive susceptibility to habitat fragmentation

TL;DR: Evidence that specialization of plant–pollinator interactions is asymmetric to observations that generalist pollinators are less affected by habitat fragmentation is linked to evidence that effects do not differ between plants with different degrees of specialization.
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Floral nectaries, nectar production dynamics and chemical composition in six ipomoea species (convolvulaceae) in relation to pollinators.

TL;DR: Floral nectaries and nectar features were compared between six Argentinian Ipomoea species with differences in their pollinator guilds, suggesting that structural constraints may play a major role in the determination of nectar traits of these species.