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Journal articles on the topic 'New Mexico'

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1

Demetrius, F. Joseph, Edward J. Tregurtha, and Scott B. MacDonald. "A Brave New World: Debt, Default and Democracy in Latin America." Journal of Interamerican Studies and World Affairs 28, no. 2 (1986): 17–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/165771.

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Plunging Petroleum Prices have elevated Mexico into the position of de facto leadership of Latin American, and perhaps of other, debtor nations in their negotiations with international creditors. Once regarded as a model debtor, Mexico has emerged as forceful spokesman for debt relief. Although Mexican authorities often couch their statements concerning foreign debt repayments in conciliatory, and even contradictory, terms, the underlying fact is that Mexico's demand for some debt relief is tantamount to an unspoken repudiation of a portion of its $96 billion foreign debt. If Mexico, the world's second largest debtor, succeeds in wresting debt relief from its lenders, then it must be recognized that debtor-creditor relationships have undergone a fundamental change: political realities, not contract law, ultimately determine how debt is to be repaid, if at all. Mexico, more by circumstance than by choice, has led debtors and creditors alike into a brave new world.
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2

Sanchez, Manuel. "The Expiration of Mexico’s Transitional Regime against Chinese Imports: The Beginning of a New Trade Era." Global Trade and Customs Journal 7, Issue 6 (2012): 300–304. http://dx.doi.org/10.54648/gtcj2012037.

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Chinese imports have always been a headache for Mexico. Just before China's accession to the WTO, Mexico had a trade deficit of 3.2 billion dollars with China. As of November of 2011, this trade deficit increased to 46.4 billion dollars. Whereas China has improved the quantity and diversity of exports to Mexico -rapidly becoming Mexico's second biggest supplier - Mexico has not taken advantage of one of the biggest markets in the world. In fact, Mexican exports to China have always been a relatively low portion of China's total imports. It is beyond the scope of this article to address why this has happened. Instead, this article will focus on the issues that will arise in the trade relationship between both countries in the near future, especially in the light of the expiration of Mexico's transitional regime that, until 11 December 2011, protected its economy from Chinese imports.
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3

Bargellini, Clara. "Looking Back at The Arts of the Missions of Northern New Spain, 1600–1821." Latin American and Latinx Visual Culture 3, no. 1 (2021): 80–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/lavc.2021.3.1.80.

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Greater Mexico refers both to the geographic region encompassing modern Mexico and its former territories in the United States, and to the Mexican cultural diaspora. Exhibitions of visual and material culture from greater Mexico have played an important role in articulating identities and affiliations that transcend limited definitions of citizenship. Following an introductory text by Jennifer Josten, five scholars offer firsthand insights into the intellectual, diplomatic, and logistical concerns underpinning key border-crossing exhibitions of the “NAFTA era.” Rubén Ortiz-Torres writes from his unique perspective as a Mexico City–based artist who began exhibiting in the United States in the late 1980s, and as a curator of recent exhibitions that highlight the existence of multiple Mexicos and Americas. Clara Bargellini reflects on a paradigm-shifting cross-border exhibition of the viceregal arts of the missions of northern New Spain. Kim N. Richter considers how the arts of ancient Mesoamerica and the Americas writ large figured within the Getty Foundation’s 2017 Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA initiative. Xóchitl M. Flores-Marcial offers insights into productive institutional collaborations with transnational Indigenous stakeholders, focusing on two recent Southern California exhibitions of the Oaxaca-based Tlacolulokos collective. Luis Vargas-Santiago discusses how Chicana/o/x art entered Mexico City’s Palacio de Bellas Artes in 2019 as a crucial component of an exhibition about how Mexican revolutionary Emiliano Zapata’s image has migrated through visual culture. Together, these texts demonstrate how exhibitions can act in the service of advancing more nuanced understandings of cultural and political interactions across greater Mexico.
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4

HEFFERN, DANIEL, ANTONIO SANTOS-SILVA, and JUAN PABLO BOTERO. "A new genus and two new species of Apomecynini, a new species of Desmiphorini, and new records in Lamiinae and Disteniidae (Coleoptera)." Zootaxa 4691, no. 5 (2019): 561–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4691.5.8.

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A new Mexican state record is provided for Holoaerenica apleta Galileo & Martins, 1987 and a new Honduran record is provided for Antodice sexnotata Franz, 1959 (both Aerenicini). A new Mexican state record is provided for Ptericoptus caudalis Bates, 1880 (Apomecynini). A new record for Panama is provided for Novantinoe hovorei Santos-Silva, 2007 (Disteniidae, Disteniinae). Vandenbergheius celaquensis, gen. nov., sp. nov. (Apomecynini) is described from Honduras; Adetus croton (Apomecynini) is described from the USA (Texas), Mexico (Sonora, Jalisco, Chiapas, Michoacán, Quintana Roo, Tamaulipas, Yucatán, Nuevo León), and Honduras; and Estoloides sinaloana (Desmiphorini) is described from Mexico (Sinaloa).
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5

Shaheen, Sharon T. "New Mexico." Texas A&M Journal of Property Law 6, no. 3 (2020): 257–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.37419/jpl.v6.i3.10.

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Under the Produced Water Act (“Act”) enacted in the 2019 regular legislative session, the New Mexico Legislature authorized the New Mexico Oil Conservation Division (“OCD”) and the New Mexico Water Quality Control Commission (“WQCC”) to regulate produced water resulting from oil and gas drilling or production. The Act governs the transportation and sale of produced water, recycled water (also referred to as recycled produced water), and treated water (also referred to as treated produced water).
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6

Jercinovic, Eugene M. "New Mexico." Madroño 56, no. 4 (2009): 295. http://dx.doi.org/10.3120/0024-9637-56.4.295.

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7

Cloud-Hughes, Michelle A., and Marc A. Baker. "New Mexico." Madroño 61, no. 1 (2014): 149–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.3120/0024-9637-61.1.149.

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8

Tonne, Phil, and Gordon C. Tucker. "New Mexico." Madroño 63, no. 1 (2016): 5–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.3120/0024-9637-63.1.5.

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9

Shaheen, Sharon T. "New Mexico." Texas A&M Journal of Property Law 8, no. 3 (2022): 299–307. http://dx.doi.org/10.37419/jpl.v8.i3.4.

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10

Shaheen, Sharon T. "New Mexico." Texas A&M Journal of Property Law 8, no. 3 (2022): 299–307. http://dx.doi.org/10.37419/jpl.v8.i3.4.

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11

Martínez, Davíd G. "New Mexico." Journal of Education Finance 45, no. 3 (2020): 344–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jef.2020.a752017.

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Martinez, David G. "New Mexico." Journal of Education Finance 44, no. 3 (2019): 304–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jef.2019.a722507.

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Martínez, Davíd G. "New Mexico." Journal of Education Finance 46, no. 3 (2021): 325–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jef.2021.a786680.

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Cohen, Joshua M. "New Mexico." Journal of Education Finance 41, no. 2 (2015): 255–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jef.2015.a602624.

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15

Martinez, David G., and Oscar Jimenez-Castellanos. "New Mexico." Journal of Education Finance 43, no. 3 (2018): 285–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jef.2018.a690112.

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16

Martinez, David G., and Oscar Jimenez-Castellanos. "New Mexico." Journal of Education Finance 42, no. 3 (2017): 301–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jef.2017.a661458.

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17

Epps, Lauren G., Caroline B. Hulett, Patrick D. Bennett, and Davíd G. Martínez. "New Mexico." Journal of Education Human Resources 42, s1 (2024): 101–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/jehr-2023-0109.

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New Mexico consummately evaluates its P-20 education system, including relevant funding to address educational inequities throughout the state. Now in her second term, New Mexico governor Michelle Lujan Grisham emphasizes education as a top priority, including increased funding for K-12 and higher education. This manuscript provides an overview of Governor Lujan Grisham’s budget for education and subsequent legislation, including New Mexico’s funding priorities for P-12 and/or higher education, pressing issues in the P-20 educational landscape, and the major human resources management initiatives being funded by New Mexico’s budget.
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18

Gibson, Joan McIver. "New Mexico." Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 1, no. 2 (1992): 122–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963180100008288.

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19

Epps, Lauren G., Davíd G. Martínez, and Patrick D. Bennett. "New Mexico." Journal of Education Human Resources 41, S1 (2023): 92–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/jehr-2023-0037.

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20

Larson, Derek V., and Sarita Nair. "New Mexico." Texas Wesleyan Law Review 18, no. 3 (2012): 551–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.37419/twlr.v18.i3.13.

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The Ideal case developed existing New Mexico law concerning the "marketable condition rule." The New Mexico Supreme Court granted certiorari of an interlocutory appeal from the district court's class certification order because it was already considering a similar appeal of a companion case from the same district, Davis v. Devon Energy Corp. In Davis, the Supreme Court noted that "[t]he common pre-tailgate deduction issues and the 'marketable condition rule' continue to dominate the overall case." Following Davis, the Court concluded that certification was appropriate in Ideal.
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Martínez, Davíd G. "New Mexico." Journal of Education Human Resources 43, S1 (2025): 97–100. https://doi.org/10.3138/jehr-2024-0087.

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This manuscript provides salient information regarding school finance policy enacted in New Mexico’s 56th Legislative Second Regular Session of 2024. New Mexico consistently evaluates its P-20 education system, including relevant funding to address educational inequities. The New Mexico governor, Michelle Lujan Grisham, emphasizes education as a top priority, increasing funding for K-12 and higher education. This manuscript provides a synoptic overview of Governor Lujan Grisham’s budget for education and subsequent legislation passed in 2nd Session of New Mexico’s 56th Legislature.
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22

MÁRQUEZ, JUAN, and JULIETA ASIAIN. "A new Mexican species of Oxyporus (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae: Oxyporinae)." Zootaxa 1155, no. 1 (2006): 51. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1155.1.5.

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Oxyporus bautistae Márquez & Asiain, sp. nov. is described based on three female specimens collected from mushrooms of the genus Boletus in an oak forest of Oaxaca, Mexico. The new species is similar to O. lawrencei Campbell, known from Distrito Federal, Guerrero, Jalisco, Mexico, Michoacan and Morelos, Mexico, and represents the eighth Mexican species of the genus.
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23

Vélez-Ibáñez, Carlos G., Phillip B. (Felipe) Gonzales, Luis F. B. Plascencia, and Jesús Rosales. "Interrogating the Ethnogenesis of the Spanish and Mexican “Other”." Aztlán: A Journal of Chicano Studies 44, no. 2 (2019): 41–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/azt.2019.44.2.41.

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This essay interrogates early New Mexican folklore through the cultural position of the folklorist Aurelio M. Espinosa and his general avoidance of most things Mexican regarding New Mexico. We consider how Espinosa and some of his students associated local materials with Spain within the context of the simultaneous rise of an essentialist political-cultural position in support of a “Spain only” identity. Additionally, we interrogate representations of New Mexican folklore as unfettered transmissions from Spain to New Mexico. We argue for the emergence of a type of political and cultural ethnogenesis that precluded associations with anything Mexican and supported a “difference” of origins which legitimized the Nuevo Mexicano political sectors and their position in relation to Anglos. These processes led to the “Othering” of Mexican populations, regarding Mexicans as either a commodity to be bought and sold or recruited for labor then expelled when unwanted together with their American born children, as in the present day.
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24

Starr, Pamela K. "Fox's Mexico: Same as It Ever Was?" Current History 101, no. 652 (2002): 58–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/curh.2001.101.652.58.

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Since the arrival of Vicente Fox to the presidency, Mexico has been stuck in neutral. The executive has been characterized by confusion, indecision, and repeated policy mistakes. Mexican political parties have shown a striking inability to adjust their behavior to the new democratic political environment. And Mexicans of all stripes remain steeped in an authoritarian culture that has prevented them from embracing the political opportunities offered by Mexico's new democratic setting.
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25

Salgado, Casandra D. "Mexican American Identity: Regional Differentiation in New Mexico." Sociology of Race and Ethnicity 6, no. 2 (2018): 179–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2332649218795193.

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Existing research inadequately addresses the variation in Mexican Americans’ patterns of ethnic identification. Drawing on 78 interviews, I address this question by exploring how conceptions of ancestry and nationality shape ethnic identification among New Mexico’s long-standing Mexican American population, Nuevomexicanos. I find that Nuevomexicanos emphasized their ties to Spanish heritage within the history of New Mexico to explain their ethnicity and to construct their identity in opposition to Mexican immigrants. Although Nuevomexicanos varied in their claims to Mexican ancestry, they generally prioritized their roots in the original Spanish settlement of New Mexico to emphasize distinctions in ancestry, nationality, and regionality from Mexican immigrants. Moreover, despite Nuevomexicanos’ persistent claims to Spanish ancestry, they did not perceive themselves as racially White. Instead, Spanish ancestry was integral to Nuevomexicano identity because it enabled them to highlight their regional ties to New Mexico and long-time American identities. Thus, I argue that Nuevomexicanos’ enduring claims to Spanish ancestry represent a defensive strategy to enact dissociation from stigmatized Mexican immigrants. Overall, these findings show that Mexican Americans’ dissociation strategies are contingent on how they define themselves as members of an ethnic and national community. These findings also indicate that “Mexican American” as an identity term is a loosely maintained membership category among “Mexican Americans” because of their intragroup heterogeneity.
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26

Ryan, Bruce D., Thomas H. Nash III, Maria de los Angeles Herrera-Campos, et al. "New records of lichens from Mexico." Nova Hedwigia 70, no. 1-2 (2000): 79–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/nova.hedwigia/70/2000/79.

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27

Bove, Kathryn P. "Language Perceptions of New Mexico: A Focus on the NM Borderland." Languages 9, no. 5 (2024): 161. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/languages9050161.

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New Mexico is located along the U.S.–Mexico border, and as such, Spanish, English, and language mixing form an integral part of the New Mexican identity. New Mexico is often divided into a northern and a southern region with the north known for Spanish archaisms due to historic isolation, and the south associated with ties to a Mexican identity due to the location of the U.S.–Mexico border. The current study uses perceptual dialectology to capture the way in which speakers in the south of New Mexico perceive this north/south divide and communicate their identity. Overall, there is evidence of the north/south divide, but speakers in southern New Mexico focus much more on language use such as Spanglish, English, and Spanish than on their northern counterparts. Participants reference language mixing over language “purity” and borders over an explicit rural/urban divide. Like previous accounts, we see reference to the “correctness” of both English and Spanish, examples of specific terminology used in different parts of the state, and descriptions of accents throughout the state.
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28

SANBORN, ALLEN F. "New species, new records and checklist of cicadas from Mexico (Hemiptera: Cicadomorpha: Cicadidae)." Zootaxa 1651, no. 1 (2007): 1–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.1651.1.1.

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Seven new species and new records for 14 species and one subspecies of cicadas from Mexico are reported. New members of the Nearctic genera Odopoea Stål, O. minuta sp.n., Chinaria Davis, C. pueblaensis sp.n., Diceroprocta Stål, D. oaxacaensis sp.n. and D. pronotolinea sp.n., Tibicen Latrielle, T. chihuahuaensis sp.n., Procollina Metcalf, P. queretaroensis sp.n., and Herrera Distant, H. coyamensis sp.n., are described. The first records of Diceroprocta cinctifera viridicosta Davis, Diceroprocta swalei (Distant), Tibicen chiricahua Davis, Tibicen chisosensis Davis, Tibicen cultriformis (Davis), Cornuplura nigroalbata (Davis), Cacama californica Davis, Cacama variegata Davis, Platypedia aperta Van Duzee, Platypedia minor Uhler, Okanagana triangulata Davis, Okanagana vanduzeei Distant, Clidophleps distanti (Van Duzee), Clidophleps distanti truncata (Van Duzee), and Clidophleps wrighti Davis from Mexico are also reported. Fidicina compostela Davis, 1934 is transferred to Fidicinoides Boulard & Martinelli. This work increases the Mexican cicada diversity by 18.8% bringing the total diversity to 117 taxa, 46.2% of which are endemic. The Mexican fauna is composed of both tropical and temperate genera with the generic diversity heavily influenced by the expansion of tropical genera into southern Mexico.
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Aguilar, Luis Aboites. "The Transnational dimensions of Mexican irrigation, 1900-1950." Journal of Political Ecology 19, no. 1 (2012): 70. http://dx.doi.org/10.2458/v19i1.21717.

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In the growing field of Mexican water history, the influence of foreign people and ideas has scarcely been recognized. The transnational dimensions of this history, however, are strong and manifold, and this article outlines an avenue of research on the topic. Commercial agriculture in the Southwest US was a model for agricultural development in Northern Mexico, and in consequence, influenced its irrigation politics. Also, engineers and engineering institutions in the two countries worked closely to carry out the model of largescale irrigation followed by the Mexican government, especially during the first decade (1926-1935) of existence of the Mexican National Irrigation Commission (the Comision Nacional de Irrigación, or CNI). In particular, the White Engineering Company, a U.S. company, played a significant role in jump-starting irrigation in Mexico. Finally, the economic viability of Mexico's new irrigated zones was linked closely to a cotton economy centered in the U.S, but which incorporated northern Mexico during and after the Revolution. By outlining this transnational water history, this article contributes to an effort to rethink and refine historical narratives about the subordination of Mexico to its northern neighbor.Key words: irrigation, northern Mexico, politics of irrigation.
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MORA-AGUILAR, EDER F., and LEONARDO DELGADO. "A new Mexican species of Rhyparus Westwood (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Aphodiinae), with new records and a key to the Mexican and Guatemalan species." Zootaxa 4609, no. 1 (2019): 196. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4609.1.13.

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In this paper we describe Rhyparus chimalapensis new species (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Aphodiinae: Rhyparini), from the region of Chimalapas, Oaxaca, Mexico. New records are given for three species of Rhyparus Westwood from Mexico and Guatemala. A key to the Mexican and Guatemalan species of this genus is included.
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HUERTA, HERÓN, and WILLIAM L. ,. JR GROGAN. "New species and new records of predaceous midges in the genera, Schizonyxhelea Clastrier and Stilobezzia Kieffer from Mexico (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae)." Zootaxa 4294, no. 4 (2017): 401. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4294.4.1.

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We describe and illustrate new species and provide new records of predaceous midges in the genera, Schizonyxhelea Clastrier and Stilobezzia Kieffer from Mexico (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae). Two new species are described and illustrated: Schizonyxhelea zoologica n. sp., and, Stilobezzia (Acanthohelea) spinellii n. sp. Included are the first Mexican records of Schizonyxhelea forattinii Wirth & Grogan, Stilobezzia (Acanthohelea) fuscula Wirth, S. (Stilobezzia) hirta Borkent and S. (S.) pallidiventris (Malloch). New distribution records are also provided for several other species that were previously known from Mexico, and a key is provided for all species of Schizonyxhelea and Stilobezzia from Mexico.
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Hedrick, Philip W., and John D. Wehausen. "Desert Bighorn Sheep: Changes in Genetic Variation Over Time and the Impact of Merging Populations." Journal of Fish and Wildlife Management 5, no. 1 (2014): 3–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.3996/082013-jfwm-055.

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Abstract Founder effects, genetic bottlenecks, and genetic drift in general can lead to low levels of genetic diversity, which can influence the persistence of populations. We examine genetic variation in two populations of desert bighorn sheep Ovis canadensis from New Mexico and Mexico to measure change over time and evaluate the impact of introducing individuals from one population into the other. Over about three generations, the amount of genetic variation in the New Mexico population increased. In contrast, over about two generations the amount of genetic variation in the Mexican population decreased by a great extent compared with an estimate from another Mexican population from which it is primarily descended. The potential reasons for these changes are discussed. In addition, although both populations have low genetic variation, introduction of Mexican rams into the New Mexico population might increase the amount of genetic variation in the New Mexico population. Overall, it appears that management to increase genetic variation might require substantial detailed monitoring and evaluation of ancestry from the different sources and fitness components.
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Solar, Carlos. "State, Violence, and Security in Mexico." Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos 30, no. 1 (2014): 241–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/msem.2014.30.1.241.

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Paul Kenny, Mónica Serrano with Arturo Sotomayor, eds., Mexico's Security Failure, Collapse into Criminal Violence (New York: Routledge, 2012). Wil G. Pansters, ed., Violence, Coercion, and State-Making in Twentieth-Century Mexico (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2012). George Philip and Susana Berruecos, eds., Mexico's Struggle for Public Security: Organized Crime and State Responses (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012). Peter Watt and Roberto Zepeda, Drug War Mexico: Politics, Neoliberalism and Violence in the New Narcoeconomy (London and New York: Zed, 2012).
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Smith, David R. "Aulacidae of the southwestern United States, Mexico, and Central America (Hymenoptera)." Beiträge zur Entomologie = Contributions to Entomology 58, no. 2 (2008): 267–355. http://dx.doi.org/10.21248/contrib.entomol.58.2.267-355.

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Für das Gebiet der südwestlichen USA (südliches Texas, New Mexico, Arizona), Mexiko und Mittelamerika werden 42 Aulacidae-Arten festgestellt, von denen 11 zu Aulacus Jurine und 31 zu Pristaulacus Kieffer gehören. Aus den südwestlichen USA sind 8 Arten bekannt, 27 aus Mexiko, eine aus Guatemala, drei aus Honduras, eine aus Nicaragua, 11 aus Costa Rica und zwei aus Panama. Die folgenden Taxa werden behandelt: Aulacus maculosus, n. sp. (Costa Rica); A. ochreus Smith, 2005 (Costa Rica); A. fascius, n. sp. (Mexiko); A. veracruz, n. sp. (Mexiko); A. costaricensis, n. sp. (Costa Rica); A heredia, n. sp. (Costa Rica), A. elongatus, n. sp. (Panama, Costa Rica); A. leon, n. sp. (Mexiko); A. whartoni, n. sp. (Mexiko); A. aneurus Walkley, 1952 (USA: New Mexico); A. dispilis Townes, 1950 (USA: Texas); Pristaulacus argutus, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. tria, n. sp. (Costa Rica); P. maculatus (Schletterer, 1889) (Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Panama); P. ruficollis (Cameron, 1887) (Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico); P. auricomus, n. sp. (Honduras, Mexico, USA: Arizona); P. virga, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. punctum, n. sp. (Costa Rica); P. decorus, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. aquilus, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. torridus (Bradley, 1908) (USA: Texas); P. anteala, n. sp. (Costa Rica); P. triclora, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. nigricoxae, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. unimacula, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. postala, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. stangei, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. tenuis, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. decolorus, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. singulus, n. sp. (Costa Rica); P. candidus, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. omninoniger, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. townesi, n. sp. (Mexiko), P. arizonicus (Townes, 1950) (USA: Arizona); P. rufitarsis (Cresson, 1864) (USA: Arizona, California, New Mexico); P. ruficruris, n. sp. (Mexico, USA: Texas); P. parkeri, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. mexiuni, n. sp. (Mexiko, USA: Arizona, Texas); P. totoferrugineus, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. hespenheidei, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. tamaulipas, n. sp. (Mexiko); P. annulatus Kieffer, 1911 (Mexiko). Aulacus hyalinipennis Westwood, 1841, wird innerhalb der Aulacidae als species incertae sedis betrachtet.Stichwörterparasitic wasps, Arizona, Texas, New Mexico, Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Cerambycidae, Buprestidae.Nomenklatorische Handlungencostaricensis Smith, 2008 (Aulacus), spec. n.elongatus Smith, 2008 (Aulacus), spec. n.fascius Smith, 2008 (Aulacus), spec. n.heredia Smith, 2008 (Aulacus), spec. n.leon Smith, 2008 (Aulacus), spec. n.maculosus Smith, 2008 (Aulacus), spec. n.veracruz Smith, 2008 (Aulacus), spec. n.whartoni Smith, 2008 (Aulacus), spec. n.anteala Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.aquilus Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.argutus Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.auricomus Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.candidus Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.decolorus Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.decorus Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.hespenheidei Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.mexiuni Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.nigricoxae Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.omninoniger Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.parkeri Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.postala Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.punctum Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.ruficollis (Cameron, 1887) (Pristaulacus), Lectotype described as Aulacus ruficollisruficruris Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.singulus Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.stangei Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.tamaulipas Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.tenuis Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.totoferrugineus Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.townesi Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.tria Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.triclora Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.unimacula Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.virga Smith, 2008 (Pristaulacus), spec. n.
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35

Conley, Karen Tallkat. "New Mexico Summer." Radical Ecologies in the Anthropocene 32, no. 2 (2017): 191–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1042994ar.

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36

Laborde, Cregan. "Taos, New Mexico." Spine 31, no. 20 (2006): i. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00007632-200609150-00001.

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37

Weishaus, Joel. "Nuclear New Mexico." Jung Journal 13, no. 2 (2019): 99–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19342039.2019.1600983.

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38

Greenberg, Amy S. "New Mexico Reservations." Reviews in American History 47, no. 2 (2019): 198–203. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/rah.2019.0029.

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39

Hunt, Adrian P., and Barry S. Kues. "New Mexico: Fossils." Rocks & Minerals 67, no. 5 (1992): 307–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00357529.1992.9926498.

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40

Kues, Barry S. "New Mexico: Geology." Rocks & Minerals 67, no. 5 (1992): 340–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00357529.1992.9926502.

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41

Southgate, M. Therese. "New Mexico Skies." JAMA 295, no. 20 (2006): 2332. http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jama.295.20.2332.

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42

Ayala-Vásquez, Olivia, Jesús Pérez-Moreno, Juan Pablo Pinzón, et al. "Broadening the Knowledge of Mexican Boletes: Addition of a New Genus, Seven New Species, and Three New Combinations." Journal of Fungi 9, no. 12 (2023): 1126. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jof9121126.

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Boletes are one of the most common groups of fungi in temperate, subtropical, and tropical ecosystems. In Mexico, the northern region has mainly been explored in terms of bolete diversity. This study describes a new genus and seven new species based on macromorphological, micromorphological, molecular, phylogenetic, and ecological data. Garcileccinum gen. nov. is typified with G. salmonicolor based on multigene phylogenetic analysis of nrLSU, RPB2, and TEF1, and it is closely related to Leccinum and Leccinellum. Garcileccinum viscosum and G. violaceotinctum are new combinations. Boletellus minimatenebris (ITS, nrLSU, and RPB2), Cacaoporus mexicanus (RPB2 and ATP6), Leccinum oaxacanum, Leccinum juarenzense (nrLSU, RPB2, and TEF1), Tylopilus pseudoleucomycelinus (nrLSU and RPB2), and Xerocomus hygrophanus (ITS, nrLSU, and RPB2) are described as new species. Boletus neoregius is reclassified as Pulchroboletus neoregius comb. nov. based on morphological and multigene phylogenetic analysis (ITS and nrLSU), and its geographic distribution is extended to Central Mexico, since the species was only known from Costa Rica. Furthermore, T. leucomycelinus is a new record from Mexico. This study contributes to increasing our knowledge of boletes and expands the diversity found in Mexican forests.
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43

Massey, Douglas S., Jacob S. Rugh, and Karen A. Pren. "The Geography of Undocumented Mexican Migration." Mexican Studies/Estudios Mexicanos 26, no. 1 (2010): 129–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/msem.2010.26.1.129.

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Using data from Mexico's Matríícula Consular program, we analyze the geographic organization of undocumented Mexican migration to the United States. We show that emigration has moved beyond its historical origins in west-central Mexico into the central region and, to a lesser extent, the southeast and border regions. In the United States, traditional gateways continue to dominate, but a variety of new destinations have emerged. California, in particular, has lost its overwhelming dominance. Although the geographic structure of Mexico-U.S. migration is relatively stable, it has nonetheless continued to evolve and change over time.
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44

VALDEZ-MONDRAGÓN, ALEJANDRO. "On the poorly known haplogynae spiders of the genus Ochyrocera Simon (Araneae, Ochyroceratidae) from Mexico: description of two new species with an updated identification key for Mexican species." Zootaxa 4226, no. 2 (2017): 194. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4226.2.2.

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Two new species of the spider genus Ochyrocera Simon 1891 are described from Mexico. Ochyrocera jarocha new species was collected under rotten trunks and hollow trunks in a tropical rainforest, in San Martin Volcano, Veracruz, Mexico. Ochyrocera pojoj new species was collected in a mixed forest, under rotten trunks, in La Trinitaria, Chiapas, Mexico, which represents the third species described from the state of Chiapas. With the description of the two new species herein, six species of Ochyrocera are recorded from Mexico. An updated taxonomic identification key and a distribution map to the Mexican species are provided.
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45

Mercado-Sierra, Angel, Julio Mena-Portales, Josep Guarro, and Gabriela Heredia-Abarca. "Veracruzomyces, a new anamorphic genus from Mexico." Nova Hedwigia 75, no. 3-4 (2002): 533–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/0029-5035/2002/0075-0533.

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46

Del Moral-Flores, Luis Fernando, María Belén González-Pérez, A. T. Wakida-Kusunoki, Adriana Martínez-Guevara, Guadalupe Del Rosario Vleeshower-Hernández, and Nissi Mariane Rodríguez-Rentería. "New records of elasmobranchs (Vertebrata: Elasmobranchii) from the southwestern Gulf of Mexico." Latin American Journal of Aquatic Research 50, no. 5 (2022): 669–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.3856/vol50-issue5-fulltext-2917.

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We present information about new records of 11 species of chondrichthyans in the southern Gulf of Mexico, adding information about new specimens and occurrence of the species in Mexican waters. The second record of the Bathytoshia centroura, Mustelus sinusmexicanus, Mobula hypostoma and Squalus clarkae species for Mexico is presented, as well as new records in marine areas and the Lagoon Alvarado system corresponding to Hexanchus vitulus, Heptranchrias perlo, Scyliorhinus retifer and Squalus cubensis. In this paper increase the number of records for species of elasmobranchs to the southwestern region of the Gulf of Mexico, increase the distribution range and knowledge about the chondrichthyofauna of Mexico.
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Romig, Kirsten B., and Kelly W. Allred. "Mosses New to New Mexico." Evansia 30, no. 3 (2013): 105–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1639/079.030.0301.

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48

Grostieta, Estefania, Carlos I. Miranda-Caballero, Sokani Sánchez-Montes, et al. "DNA barcoding and new records of Ornithodoros yumatensis from Central Mexico." Veterinary Research Communications 47, no. 4 (2023): 2339–50. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13491183.

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(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) Bats represent the second order of mammals with the highest number of species worldwide with over 1,616 species, and almost 10% of them are recorded in Mexico. These mammals have a great diversity of ectoparasites, in particular soft ticks of the genus Ornithodoros. Desmodus rotundus is one of the bat species that has scarcely been studied in terms of tick species richness in Mexico, with three tick species reported in five of the 32 Mexican states. For this reason, the aim of the present work was to identify ticks associated with D. rotundus from Central Mexico. Fieldwork was undertaken in the municipality El Marqués, Ejido Atongo A, Querétaro, Mexico. Bats were captured using mist nets and were visually inspected for tick presence. The ectoparasites were identified morphologically and molecularly with the use of mitochondrial markers 16SrDNA and cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI). A total of 30 D. rotundus (1 female, 29 males) were captured, from which 20 larvae identified as Ornithodoros yumatensis were recovered. Molecular analysis confirmed the presence of this species with identity values of 99–100% with sequences of this species from the southwestern US, and the Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico. This is the first report of ticks associated with bats for the state of Querétaro, providing the first sequences of the COI gene from Mexican populations of O. yumatensis and shows an increase in the distribution of this soft tick across Central Mexico.
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Grostieta, Estefania, Carlos I. Miranda-Caballero, Sokani Sánchez-Montes, et al. "DNA barcoding and new records of Ornithodoros yumatensis from Central Mexico." Veterinary Research Communications 47, no. 4 (2023): 2339–50. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13491183.

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(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) Bats represent the second order of mammals with the highest number of species worldwide with over 1,616 species, and almost 10% of them are recorded in Mexico. These mammals have a great diversity of ectoparasites, in particular soft ticks of the genus Ornithodoros. Desmodus rotundus is one of the bat species that has scarcely been studied in terms of tick species richness in Mexico, with three tick species reported in five of the 32 Mexican states. For this reason, the aim of the present work was to identify ticks associated with D. rotundus from Central Mexico. Fieldwork was undertaken in the municipality El Marqués, Ejido Atongo A, Querétaro, Mexico. Bats were captured using mist nets and were visually inspected for tick presence. The ectoparasites were identified morphologically and molecularly with the use of mitochondrial markers 16SrDNA and cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI). A total of 30 D. rotundus (1 female, 29 males) were captured, from which 20 larvae identified as Ornithodoros yumatensis were recovered. Molecular analysis confirmed the presence of this species with identity values of 99–100% with sequences of this species from the southwestern US, and the Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico. This is the first report of ticks associated with bats for the state of Querétaro, providing the first sequences of the COI gene from Mexican populations of O. yumatensis and shows an increase in the distribution of this soft tick across Central Mexico.
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PINEDO-ESCATEL, J. A., and C. H. DIETRICH. "A new species of the genus Ceratagallia (Cicadellidae: Megophthalminae) from Central Mexico." Zootaxa 4347, no. 2 (2017): 293. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4347.2.5.

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Ceratagallia (Ceratagallia) brailovskyi sp. nov., is here described and illustrated from Central Mexico. The new species appears to be closely related to the C. bigeloviae species group, which includes previously described Mexican species. A key, species list, and distributional map for Ceratagallia in Mexico are provided.
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