Automated Author ProfileHeleno, Ruben
Heleno, Ruben
Current S-Index
Sum of Dataset Indices for all datasets
Average Dataset Index per Dataset
Average Dataset Index per dataset
Total Datasets
Total datasets for this author
Average FAIR Score
Average FAIR Score per dataset
Total Citations
Total citations to the author's datasets
Total Mentions
Total mentions of the author's datasets
S-Index Interpretation
The S-Index (Sharing Index) is a comprehensive metric that represents the cumulative impact of all your datasets. It is calculated as the sum of Dataset Index scores across all your claimed datasets.
What it means:
- A higher S-index indicates greater overall impact of your datasets relative to typical datasets in their fields of research
- The S-Index grows as you add more datasets or as existing datasets gain more citations and mentions
- It provides a single number to track your research data impact over time
Current S-Index: 10.4 (sum of 25 datasets Dataset Index scores)
More information here.
S-Index Over Time
Cumulative Citations Over Time
Cumulative Mentions Over Time
Datasets
Bird-plant interaction data sampled on two Galápagos islands by collecting pollen and faecal samples from individual birds captured with mist-nets across an entire year.
Authors
- Parejo, Sandra Hervias ;
- Tur, Cristina ;
- Heleno, Ruben ;
- Nogales, Manuel ;
- Timóteo, Sérgio ;
- Traveset, Anna
Bird-plant interaction data sampled on two Galápagos islands by collecting pollen and faecal samples from individual birds captured with mist-nets across an entire year.
Authors
- Parejo, Sandra Hervias ;
- Tur, Cristina ;
- Heleno, Ruben ;
- Nogales, Manuel ;
- Timóteo, Sérgio ;
- Traveset, Anna
Web of Science search strings:TOPIC: (ecology) AND LANGUAGE: (English)Timespan: 1980-2018. Indexes: SCI-EXPANDED.
TOPIC: (ecology) AND ALL FIELDS: ("Network*" or "Food web*" or "Foodweb*") AND LANGUAGE: (English)Timespan: 1980-2018. Indexes: SCI-EXPANDED.
TOPIC: (ecology) AND ALL FIELDS: ("Network*" or "Food web*" or "Foodweb*") AND ALL FIELDS: ("collapse" or "disruption") AND LANGUAGE: (English)
Timespan: 1980-2018. Indexes: SCI-EXPANDED.
Authors
- Heleno, Ruben
Web of Science search strings:TOPIC: (ecology) AND LANGUAGE: (English)Timespan: 1980-2018. Indexes: SCI-EXPANDED.
TOPIC: (ecology) AND ALL FIELDS: ("Network*" or "Food web*" or "Foodweb*") AND LANGUAGE: (English)Timespan: 1980-2018. Indexes: SCI-EXPANDED.
TOPIC: (ecology) AND ALL FIELDS: ("Network*" or "Food web*" or "Foodweb*") AND ALL FIELDS: ("collapse" or "disruption") AND LANGUAGE: (English)
Timespan: 1980-2018. Indexes: SCI-EXPANDED.
Authors
- Heleno, Ruben
Mutualistic interactions like those established between plants and mycorrhizal fungi or seed dispersers are key drivers of plant population dynamics and ecosystem functioning; however, these interactions have rarely been explored together. We assembled a tripartite fungi–plant–disperser network in the Gorongosa National Park—Mozambique, to test (1) if diversity and importance of plant mutualists above- and belowground are correlated, and (2) whether biotically and abiotically dispersed plants are associated with distinct arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). We quantified seed dispersal by animals for 1 year and characterized the AMF of 26 common plant species. Sixteen plant species were dispersed by 15 animals and colonized by 48 AMF virtual taxa (VT), while the remaining 10 plant species were not dispersed by animals and associated with 34 AMF VT. We found no evidence for a correlation between the number of plant partners above- and belowground or on plant specialization on both types of partners. We also found no evidence for differentiation of AMF communities between biotically and abiotically dispersed plants. Our results suggest that the establishment of plant interactions with seed dispersers and mycorrhizal fungi is largely independent and that both biotically and abiotically dispersed plants seem to associate with similar communities of AMF.
Authors
- Correia, Marta ;
- Rodríguez-Echeverría, Susana ;
- Timóteo, Sérgio ;
- Freitas, Helena ;
- Heleno, Ruben
No description available
Authors
- Correia, Marta ;
- Rodríguez-Echeverría, Susana ;
- Timóteo, Sérgio ;
- Freitas, Helena ;
- Heleno, Ruben
Mutualistic interactions like those established between plants and mycorrhizal fungi or seed dispersers are key drivers of plant population dynamics and ecosystem functioning; however, these interactions have rarely been explored together. We assembled a tripartite fungi–plant–disperser network in the Gorongosa National Park—Mozambique, to test (1) if diversity and importance of plant mutualists above- and belowground are correlated, and (2) whether biotically and abiotically dispersed plants are associated with distinct arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). We quantified seed dispersal by animals for 1 year and characterized the AMF of 26 common plant species. Sixteen plant species were dispersed by 15 animals and colonized by 48 AMF virtual taxa (VT), while the remaining 10 plant species were not dispersed by animals and associated with 34 AMF VT. We found no evidence for a correlation between the number of plant partners above- and belowground or on plant specialization on both types of partners. We also found no evidence for differentiation of AMF communities between biotically and abiotically dispersed plants. Our results suggest that the establishment of plant interactions with seed dispersers and mycorrhizal fungi is largely independent and that both biotically and abiotically dispersed plants seem to associate with similar communities of AMF.
Authors
- Correia, Marta ;
- Rodríguez-Echeverría, Susana ;
- Timóteo, Sérgio ;
- Freitas, Helena ;
- Heleno, Ruben
Mutualistic interactions like those established between plants and mycorrhizal fungi or seed dispersers are key drivers of plant population dynamics and ecosystem functioning; however, these interactions have rarely been explored together. We assembled a tripartite fungi–plant–disperser network in the Gorongosa National Park—Mozambique, to test (1) if diversity and importance of plant mutualists above- and belowground are correlated, and (2) whether biotically and abiotically dispersed plants are associated with distinct arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). We quantified seed dispersal by animals for 1 year and characterized the community of 26 common plant species. Sixteen plant species were dispersed by 15 animals and colonized by 48 AMF virtual taxa (VT), while the remaining 10 plant species were not dispersed by animals and associated with 34 AMF VT. We found no evidence for a correlation between the number of plant partners above- and belowground or on plant specialization on both types of partners. We also found no evidence for differentiation of AMF communities between biotically and abiotically dispersed plants. Our results suggest that the establishment of plant interactions with seed dispersers and mycorrhizal fungi is largely independent and that both biotically and abiotically dispersed plants seem to associate with similar communities of AMF.
Authors
- Correia, Marta ;
- Rodríguez-Echeverría, Susana ;
- Timóteo, Sérgio ;
- Freitas, Helena ;
- Heleno, Ruben
Mutualistic interactions like those established between plants and mycorrhizal fungi or seed dispersers are key drivers of plant population dynamics and ecosystem functioning; however, these interactions have rarely been explored together. We assembled a tripartite fungi–plant–disperser network in the Gorongosa National Park—Mozambique, to test (1) if diversity and importance of plant mutualists above- and belowground are correlated, and (2) whether biotically and abiotically dispersed plants are associated with distinct arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). We quantified seed dispersal by animals for 1 year and characterized the AMF of 26 common plant species. Sixteen plant species were dispersed by 15 animals and colonized by 48 AMF virtual taxa (VT), while the remaining 10 plant species were not dispersed by animals and associated with 34 AMF VT. We found no evidence for a correlation between the number of plant partners above- and belowground or on plant specialization on both types of partners. We also found no evidence for differentiation of AMF communities between biotically and abiotically dispersed plants. Our results suggest that the establishment of plant interactions with seed dispersers and mycorrhizal fungi is largely independent and that both biotically and abiotically dispersed plants seem to associate with similar communities of AMF.
Authors
- Correia, Marta ;
- Rodríguez-Echeverría, Susana ;
- Timóteo, Sérgio ;
- Freitas, Helena ;
- Heleno, Ruben
Mutualistic interactions like those established between plants and mycorrhizal fungi or seed dispersers are key drivers of plant population dynamics and ecosystem functioning; however, these interactions have rarely been explored together. We assembled a tripartite fungi–plant–disperser network in the Gorongosa National Park—Mozambique, to test (1) if diversity and importance of plant mutualists above- and belowground are correlated, and (2) whether biotically and abiotically dispersed plants are associated with distinct arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF). We quantified seed dispersal by animals for 1 year and characterized the community of 26 common plant species. Sixteen plant species were dispersed by 15 animals and colonized by 48 AMF virtual taxa (VT), while the remaining 10 plant species were not dispersed by animals and associated with 34 AMF VT. We found no evidence for a correlation between the number of plant partners above- and belowground or on plant specialization on both types of partners. We also found no evidence for differentiation of AMF communities between biotically and abiotically dispersed plants. Our results suggest that the establishment of plant interactions with seed dispersers and mycorrhizal fungi is largely independent and that both biotically and abiotically dispersed plants seem to associate with similar communities of AMF.
Authors
- Correia, Marta ;
- Rodríguez-Echeverría, Susana ;
- Timóteo, Sérgio ;
- Freitas, Helena ;
- Heleno, Ruben