Results 31 to 40 of about 2,156 (136)
Incluye comunicados e información dirigido a la comunidad académica.
Academia Peruana de la Lengua
doaj
Abstract ‘El Blanquizal’ was one of the most important Nassau grouper (Epinephelus striatus) spawning aggregation sites (SAS) in the Mexican Caribbean. However, the characteristics of the population that still uses this site for reproduction remain unknown.
Luis Salgado Cruz +6 more
wiley +1 more source
Incluye comunicados e información dirigido a la comunidad académica.
Academia Peruana de la Lengua
doaj
Writing in community: Relationship building and accountability in knowledge production
Abstract As anthropology reckons with its past, present, and future, anthropologists increasingly seek to challenge inequities within the discipline and academia more broadly. Anthropology, regardless of subdiscipline, is a social endeavor. Yet research often remains an isolating (though not necessarily solitary) process, even within research teams and
Jordi Armani Rivera Prince +16 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT This article analyzes the different expressions of authenticity, fidelity, and genuineness surrounding the Mexican culinary scene in New York. On the one hand, self‐identified Mexicans express sensory and memory nostalgia during the production and consumption of foods they recognize as their own.
Axel G. Elías Jiménez
wiley +1 more source
Incluye comunicados e información dirigido a la comunidad académica.
Academia Peruana de la Lengua
doaj
Abstract In the context of climate change, biodiversity decline and social injustice, reciprocity emerges as a way of living and being in this world that holds transformative potential. Concepts of reciprocity vary and are enacted in specific cultural practices grounded in Indigenous and local knowledge systems.
Irene Teixidor‐Toneu +20 more
wiley +1 more source
Incluye comunicados e información dirigido a la comunidad académica.
Academia Peruana de la Lengua
doaj
Successional Growth Dynamics of Woody Saplings in Tropical Dry Forest Understory
The factors that drive sapling growth in tropical dry forest succession remain unclear. Growth rates are higher in the early stages of succession and then decrease. Light and not water seems to be the main factor limiting sapling growth along succession. The successional guild of species and the taxonomic identity as a Leguminosae were the main factors
Rodrigo Díaz‐Talamantes +7 more
wiley +1 more source
Incluye comunicados e información dirigido a la comunidad académica.
Academia Peruana de la Lengua
doaj

