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1

Dick, Carl W. "Review of the Bat Flies of Honduras, Central America (Diptera: Streblidae)". Journal of Parasitology Research 2013 (2013): 1–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/437696.

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Streblid bat flies are obligate and host-specific blood-feeding ectoparasites of bats. While the bat flies of some American countries are well studied (e.g., Panama, Venezuela), little is known about Honduran Streblidae. Accumulation of substantial numbers of specimens, from several different collections, has enabled a relatively thorough treatment of the fauna. This study is based on 2,236 specimens representing 17 genera and 43 species of Streblidae. Of those presently reported, 11 genera and 32 species are new records for Honduras, increasing the number of known genera and species by 65% and 74%, respectively. Collection and host data are listed for all known Honduran streblid bat fly species. Comments regarding host associations and specificity, geographic distribution, and taxonomic problems are given in the species accounts.
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2

Brockett, Charles D. "Public Policy, Peasants, and Rural Development in Honduras". Journal of Latin American Studies 19, n.º 1 (mayo de 1987): 69–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022216x00017144.

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For approximately the last two-and-a-half decades it has been a stated goal of both Honduran and U.S. policy to improve the welfare of the Honduran people, both directly through the provision of services and indirectly through the promotion of economic development. The need is great; Honduras has the lowest per capita GNP in Central America ($660 in 1984) and the highest population growth rate (3.4%). It also has the second highest percentage of its population living in rural areas (61%). Consequently, rural development has been a primary concern of development programs.
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3

Rosales, Alfonso, Adriana Yepes-Mayorga, Alejandro Arias, Fabiano Franz, Joanne Thomas, Jamo Huddle, Ramón Jeremías Soto, Maya Haynes, Monica Prado y Dennis Cherian. "A cross-sectional survey on ZIKV in Honduras". International Journal of Health Governance 22, n.º 2 (5 de junio de 2017): 83–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijhg-11-2016-0053.

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Purpose Zika virus (ZIKV) statistics in Honduras are the highest among countries in Central America. National risk communication strategies have primarily focused on vector control and are integrated into existing approaches for Dengue and Chikungunya. Given the new evidence on ZIKV, there is a need to revamp risk communication strategies so that they are informed by dynamic listening methods such as knowledge, attitudes, and practices. The paper aims to discuss this issue. Design/methodology/approach A cross-sectional survey was administered to 604 respondents in 21 designated Honduran communities using a two-stage, 30-cluster sampling method. Findings Almost eight out of ten Hondurans knew that Zika can be transmitted by the bite of a mosquito; however, only 2 and 0.1 percent, respectively, were aware that Zika can be spread by sexual intercourse and from a pregnant woman to her fetus. In total, four out of ten Hondurans knew that there is a causal relationship between Zika and microcephaly in newborns, and three out of ten knew that there is an association between Zika and Guillian-Barré syndrome. Overall, 50 percent of respondents said that they did not have enough information about the disease. Social implications The findings of this study clearly identify information priority gaps that need to be urgently addressed by national stakeholders involved in public health activities to protect the most vulnerable population against Zika disease and its complications. Originality/value This study is the first of its kind in Central America to inform any national risk communication strategy since the inception of the ZIKV response, particularly among at risk populations.
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4

Sedgley, M. y J. A. Gardner. "CENTRAL AMERICA (MEXICO, HONDURAS, COSTA RICA, PANAMA)". Acta Horticulturae, n.º 250 (septiembre de 1989): 47–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.17660/actahortic.1989.250.3.

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5

Finch, R. C. y A. W. Ritchie. "The Guayape fault system, Honduras, Central America". Journal of South American Earth Sciences 4, n.º 1-2 (enero de 1991): 43–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0895-9811(91)90017-f.

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6

Ander, Mark E., Carlos L. V. Aiken y Maricio F. De la Fuente. "Regional gravity investigation of Honduras, Central America". Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 45, n.º 1-2 (marzo de 1991): 11–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0377-0273(91)90019-v.

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7

Graciolli, Gustavo, Hefer D. Ávila-Palma, Eduardo J. Ordoñez Trejo, José A. Soler-Orellana, Diego I. Ordoñez-Mazier, Marcio Martínez, Richard LaVal y Manfredo A. Turcios-Casco. "Additions of host associations and new records of bat ectoparasites of the families Spinturnicidae, Nycteribiidae and Streblidae from Honduras". Check List 17, n.º 2 (9 de marzo de 2021): 459–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.15560/17.2.459.

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We captured mormoopids, phyllostomids, and vespertilionids in Honduras to collect bat ectoparasites. Two species of Spinturnicidae (Acari) are the first reports of this family in Honduras. One species of Basilia Miranda Ribeiro, 1903, and four of Streblidae are recorded for the first time in Honduras. With these results, the current species number of each family for Honduras are two species of Spinturnicidae, three of Nycteribiidae, and 48 of Streblidae. We compared the number of species of Streblidae and bats in Honduras to highly sampled countries in Central and South America. Clearly, more effort is still needed in Honduras, although this is the third attempt to study the bat ectoparasites in Honduras.
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8

BARRIOS-IZÁS, MANUEL A. "Taxonomy of the weevil genus Plumolepilius Barrios-Izás & Anderson (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Molytinae: Conotrachelini): new species from Central America". Zootaxa 4768, n.º 2 (1 de mayo de 2020): 151–92. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4768.2.1.

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Seventeen new species of the genus Plumolepilius Barrios-Izás & Anderson 2016, are described. Images of habitus and genitalia of both sexes are presented, as well as a dichotomous key for the identification of males and females of the known species of the genus. The species included here are P. andersoni Barrios-Izás, new species (Costa Rica and Panamá), P. antonioi Barrios-Izás, new species (Honduras), P. camuna Barrios-Izás, new species (Nicaragua), P. genieri Barrios-Izás, new species (Honduras), P. guaimacaensis Barrios-Izás, new species (Honduras), P. hectori Barrios-Izás, new species (Costa Rica), P. linaresi Barrios-Izás, new species (Honduras), P. maesi Barrios-Izás, new species (Nicaragua), P. molinai Barrios-Izás, new species (Honduras), P. monzoni Barrios-Izás, new species (Guatemala), P. morronei Barrios-Izás, new species (Honduras), P. nelsoni Barrios-Izás, new species (Honduras), P. nicaraguensis Barrios-Izás, new species (Nicaragua), P. obrienorum Barrios-Izás, new species (Costa Rica), P. solisi Barrios-Izás, new species (Costa Rica), P. velizi Barrios-Izás, new species (Honduras) and P. zarazagai Barrios-Izás, new species (Honduras).
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9

Gordon, Todd y Jeffery R. Webber. "Post-Coup Honduras: Latin America’s Corridor of Reaction". Historical Materialism 21, n.º 3 (2013): 16–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1569206x-12341316.

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AbstractThis article offers an historical-materialist account of the coup in Honduras on 28 June 2009, which ousted democratically elected President Manuel Zelaya. It draws on over two dozen interviews with members of theFrente Nacional de la Resistencia Popular[National Front of Popular Resistance, FNRP], and participation in numerous marches and assemblies over two periods of fieldwork – January 2010, and June–July 2011. The paper steps back in time to provide an historical cartography of the basic material structures of the Honduran economy and its integration into the world market, as well as the geopolitical role it played as a launching pad for Ronald Reagan’s counter-insurgency campaigns against guerrilla forces elsewhere in the region during the 1980s. We show how the defeat of mass guerrilla insurgencies in Guatemala and El Salvador, as well as the triumph over the Sandinista government in Nicaragua by 1990, allowed for the neoliberal pacification of Central America as a whole, including Honduras. We further demonstrate how the centre-leftist Manuel Zelaya, elected to the Honduran presidency in 2006, modestly encroached upon neoliberal orthodoxy and forged geopolitical alliances with left and centre-left governments elsewhere in the region, laying the bases for his violent overthrow. Finally, the paper traces the origins, trajectory, and heterogeneity of the resistance that emerged almost immediately after the coup had been carried out.
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10

Molinero, Marco R., Kenton R. Holden, Luis C. Rodriguez, Julianne S. Collins, Jose A. Samra y Shlomo Shinnar. "Pediatric convulsive status epilepticus in Honduras, Central America". Epilepsia 50, n.º 10 (octubre de 2009): 2314–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1528-1167.2009.02266.x.

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11

Zambrano, Lysien I., Itzel Fuentes, Heidy Rodas-Ortez, Marvin Maldonado, Bredy Lara, Manuel Sierra, Diana M. Castañeda-Hernández y Alfonso J. Rodriguez-Morales. "Tuberculosis in prisons: Honduras, Central America, 2007–2014". Journal of the Formosan Medical Association 116, n.º 7 (julio de 2017): 565–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jfma.2017.03.006.

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12

Mérida, Julio Enrique y Gustavo Adolfo Cruz. "First record brown four-eyed opossum marsupial in Honduras ( Rio Platano Biosphere Reserve )". UNED Research Journal 7, n.º 2 (15 de diciembre de 2015): 337–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.22458/urj.v7i2.1163.

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It is adding a new record of marsupial to Honduras, Metachirus nudicaudatus, and the second record to Nuclear Central America, based in two specimens, male and female. These increments to nine species and six the generas of didelphids for the country. The female without a pouch that it is present in other Honduras didelphids, execpt in marmosa. Specimens come from the community of Baltiltuk, Platano River Biosphera Reserve (RBRP), Gracias a Dios Department. There are discrepancies in the litterature about its distribution in México and Central America, some authors mention its from Honduras, but without catalogue record, hightligthin the importance of the record of the specie.
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13

Marceniuk, Alexandre P. y Ricardo Betancur-R. "Revision of the species of the genus Cathorops (Siluriformes: Ariidae) from Mesoamerica and the Central American Caribbean, with description of three new species". Neotropical Ichthyology 6, n.º 1 (marzo de 2008): 25–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s1679-62252008000100004.

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The ariid genus Cathorops includes species that occur mainly in estuarine and freshwater habitats of the eastern and western coasts of southern Mexico, Central and South America. The species of Cathorops from the Mesoamerica (Atlantic slope) and Caribbean Central America are revised, and three new species are described: C. belizensis from mangrove areas in Belize; C. higuchii from shallow coastal areas and coastal rivers in the Central American Caribbean, from Honduras to Panama; and C. kailolae from río Usumacinta and lago Izabal basins in Mexico and Guatemala. Additionally, C. aguadulce, from the río Papaloapan basin in Mexico, and C. melanopus from the río Motagua basin in Guatemala and Honduras, are redescribed and their geographic distributions are revised.
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14

Mora, José Manuel, Mario Roberto Espinal, Gerardo Chaves y Lucía Isabel López. "Distributional records for Loxopholis rugiceps Cope, 1869 (Squamata, Gymnophthalmidae) in Central America". Check List 15, n.º 3 (10 de mayo de 2019): 363–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.15560/15.3.363.

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Only 2 lizard species of the 11 members of the genus Loxopholis Cope, 1869 are found in Central America, L. southi (Ruthven & Gaige, 1924) from Costa Rica to Colombia and L. rugiceps Cope, 1869 from Panama and Colombia. We report new country records for L. rugiceps from Honduras and Costa Rica. We collected 4 individuals of this species in Honduras in 2018 and 2 specimens in Costa Rica in 1997 and 2017. We discuss the distribution of L. rugiceps in Central America.
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15

Cáceres, Luis René. "Youth Unemployment and Underdevelopment in Honduras". International Journal of Economics and Finance 13, n.º 2 (30 de enero de 2021): 61. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/ijef.v13n2p61.

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This paper analyzes the determinants and consequences of youth unemployment in Honduras. The study is based on the estimation of error correction models that express youth unemployment in terms of real sector variables. The results indicate that exports, remittances and self employment reduce youth unemployment, while the expansion of the service sector increases it; other results show that youth unemployment is susceptible to economic activity in the other Central American countries, specifically to economic growth in Guatemala, El Salvador and Nicaragua. Youth unemployment exerts negative impacts on Honduras’ productivity and on economic growth. The study also highlights the role of education on preventing youth unemployment and the importance of designing a Youth Agenda that would comprise several initiatives that are of special value to Honduran youth. It is hoped that these results would motivate policy makers and society in general to increase investments in the human capital areas so that youth avoid falling into the traps resulting from unemployment.
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16

ORTIZ-DÍAZ, JUAN JAVIER, ITZIAR ARNELAS, JUAN TUN y JOSÉ SALVADOR FLORES. "Neomillspaughia hondurensis (Polygonaceae), a new species from Central America". Phytotaxa 144, n.º 2 (8 de noviembre de 2013): 56. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/phytotaxa.144.2.3.

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A new species Neomillspaughia hondurensis (Polygonaceae) from Honduras is described and illustrated. This species is morphologically and ecollogicaly different from the other two currently known Neomillspaughia species, being more related to N. emarginata than to N. paniculata. A comprehensive comparison and a key for the three species are provided. Se describe e ilustra la nueva especie Neomillspaughia hondurensis (Polygonaceae) de Honduras. Esta especie es morfológicamente y ecológicamente diferente de las dos únicas especies de Neomillspaughia, estando más relacionada con N. emarginata que con N. paniculata. Se proporciona información comparativa de la nueva especie con las especies relacionadas y una clave para la identificación de las mismas.
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17

Portillo Reyes, Hector Orlando. "LA MOSKITIA HONDUREÑA, EL LÍMITE MÁS AL NORTE DE LA DISTRIBUCIÓN ACTUAL DEL OSO HORMIGUERO GIGANTE (Myrmecophaga tridactyla)". Revista Mexicana de Mastozoología (Nueva Epoca) 4, n.º 2 (15 de diciembre de 2014): 33. http://dx.doi.org/10.22201/ie.20074484e.2014.4.2.195.

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RESUMENEl oso hormiguero gigante también conocido en Centro América como oso caballo (Myrmecophaga tridactyla), es una de las especies carismáticas del mundo. Se ha documentado en la literatura que los límites de la distribución más septentrional para esta especie son Belice y Guatemala. El mapa de su distribución para Centro América da inicio en toda la franja Caribe de Panamá e incluye todo el territorio de Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador y una mínima porción de la costa del Caribe de Guatemala y Belice. Sin embargo, M. tridactyla no se registra en los últimos 100 años para Guatemala, Belice y El Salvador. En Honduras se realizaron diferentes monitoreos en la región Caribe y Moskitia registrándose fotocapturas del oso caballo únicamente en la Reserva de la Biosfera del Río Plátano y la Reserva propuesta de Rus Rus. Este análisis propone como límite septentrional de la distribución del M. tridactyla la región de la Moskitia hondureña, basados en la ausencia de esta especie en los listados actuales oficiales de los países de Guatemala, El Salvador y Belice, en la revisión bibliográfica para Centro América y en los monitoreos que se realizaron en la región Caribe y Moskitia hondureña. Palabras clave: Centro América, oso caballo, septentrional, Caribe, Moskitia.ABSTRACTThe giant anteater also known in Central America as oso caballo (Myrmecophaga. tridactyla), is one of the world’s charismatic species. It has been mentioned for different sources that giant anteater most northern limit distributions are Belize and Guatemala. The distribution map for Central America begins and extends throughout the Caribbean of Panama and includes the entire territory of Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador and a minimal portion of the Caribbean coast of Guatemala and Belize. However M. tridactyla is not recorded in the last 100 years in Guatemala, Belize and El Salvador. In Honduras several biological monitoring were performed in the Caribbean and the Moskitia region recorded evidence for the specie only for the Biosphere Reserve of Río Plátano and the biological Reserve of Rus Rus in the Moskitia region. This analysis propose as most northerly for M. tridactyla the Honduran Moskitia region, based in the absence on the most recent check list for Guatemala, El Salvador, and Belize, also literature review for Central America and the biological monitoring performed in the Caribbean and Moskitia region. Keywords: Central America, giant anteater, Northern, Caribbean, Moskitia.
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18

MAHONEY, JAMES. "Radical, Reformist and Aborted Liberalism: Origins of National Regimes in Central America". Journal of Latin American Studies 33, n.º 2 (mayo de 2001): 221–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022216x0100606x.

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During the twentieth century, the countries of Central America were characterised by remarkably different political regimes: military-authoritarianism in Guatemala and El Salvador, progressive democracy in Costa Rica and traditional-authoritarianism in Honduras and Nicaragua. This article explains these contrasting regime outcomes by exploring the agrarian and state-building reforms pursued by political leaders during the nineteenth- and early twentieth-century liberal reform period. Based on differences in the transformation of state and class structures, three types of liberalism are identified: radical liberalism in Guatemala and El Salvador, reformist liberalism in Costa Rica and aborted liberalism in Honduras and Nicaragua. It is argued that these types of liberalism set the Central American countries on contrasting paths of political development, culminating in diverse regime outcomes.
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19

Echeverri-Gent, Elisavinda. "Forgotten Workers: British West Indians and the Early Days of the Banana Industry in Costa Rica and Honduras". Journal of Latin American Studies 24, n.º 2 (mayo de 1992): 275–308. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022216x00023397.

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The Central America of books, and indeed of our imaginations, does not have very many black actors. That is not because blacks have not been present in the unfolding of Central American history. It is because their participation has been selectively ignored. During the last decade there have been a few welcome exceptions to this trend; however, a lacuna still remains. This article focuses on the role played by the first generation of black British West Indian immigrants in the development of the Costa Rican and Honduran labour movements - an area of history in which blacks have been particularly ignored.To this day the populations of black British West Indian descent living on the Atlantic Coast of Costa Rica and Honduras have remained outside the mainstream of political and cultural life in these two countries. It is not surprising, therefore, that they have also been neglected historically.Nowhere is this tendency more glaring than in the literature on labour history – especially that concerned with the important banana exporting sector. With few exceptions, the role of the British West Indian workers in the early period of the banana industry is dismissed. Those that acknowledge their role minimise the workers' importance by arguing that they failed to act collectively in challenging their employers. In brief, this view argues that black West Indian workers are not important to a study of labour politics in Honduras and Costa Rica.Historical evidence renders this suggestion invalid. The British West Indian workers who came to Honduras and Costa Rica during the last century in search of employment were neither indifferent to, nor totally accepting of, their situation.
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20

Kenix, Linda Jean y Jorge Bolanos Lopez. "Representations of refugees in their home countries and abroad: A content analysis of la caravana migrante/the migrant caravan in Central America and the United States". Newspaper Research Journal 42, n.º 1 (15 de febrero de 2021): 48–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0739532921989490.

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In October 2018, Honduran citizens started walking toward the American South border looking to be allowed entry into the United States due to not having work opportunities nor humanitarian aid in Honduras. More people joined them and this group was named la caravana migrante, the migrant caravan. Our content analyses of articles in five U.S. and five Central American newspapers sought to find similarities and differences in reporting. Despite differences in language and proximity to the caravan, reporting showed strong uniformity both within and across countries. Implications for universal norms of journalism as well as intermedia agenda setting were explored.
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21

van Dort, John. "First record of Western Gull, Larus occidentalis Audubon, 1839 (Charadriiformes, Laridae), for Honduras". Check List 16, n.º 3 (26 de junio de 2020): 781–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.15560/16.3.781.

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I present the first record for Honduras of Western Gull, Larus occidentalis Audubon, 1839, a species found on the Pacific coast of southern Canada, the United States and northern Mexico. An adult was present for at least two weeks at an estuary in the Gulf of Fonseca in southern Honduras. This observation represents the third record of this species for Central America.
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22

Carías, Marcela. "Revisión del vocabulario español-garífuna sobre salud". LETRAS, n.º 45 (26 de abril de 2009): 69–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.15359/rl.1-45.3.

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Estudio de aspectos específicos referidos a procesos de renovación y actualización del garífuna, lengua de la familia arahuaca, hablada en territorios centroamericanos, especialmente de Honduras, Guatemala y Belice. Se centra en el análisis de sus contactos con el español, sobre todo del vocabulario sobre salud. This study is about specific aspects of the renewal processes in the Garifuna language (belonging to the Arawak family) spoken in Central America, especially in Honduras, Guatemala and Belize. Its contact with Spanish is analyzed particularly regarding vocabulary related to health.
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Bastida, Francisco, Lorenzo Estrada y María-Dolores Guillamón. "Determinants of Financial E-Transparency in Honduran Municipalities". International Journal of Public Administration in the Digital Age 7, n.º 2 (abril de 2020): 23–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/ijpada.2020040102.

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This paper contributes to the scarce literature on e-government transparency in Central America by analyzing the impact of political, financial and socio-economic factors on municipal financial e-transparency in Honduras. The sample covers 86 Honduran municipalities in 2016-17. The data show a weak impact of ideology and mayor's gender on e-transparency, with progressive governments and men achieving more e-transparency. Municipalities receiving more transfers are more transparent. Taking all financial variables together, the data are in line with the Theory of Fiscal Illusion and the Theory of Agency, since municipalities are not reporting greater levels of taxes, deficit, and debt to their taxpayers. Honduran municipalities are only concerned about meeting central government legal requirements about transfers received. The fact that municipalities do not increase e-transparency to be held accountable by their citizens is against the assumptions of the Theory of Legitimacy. Finally, larger municipalities and with greater income are more fiscally transparent.
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24

Fuentes, Itzel, Karla Henriquez, Fausto Muñoz, Elsa Palou, Tito Alvarado, Ivette Lorenzana, Víctor Valladares, Arturo Corrales, Lysien Zambrano y Manuel Sierra. "COVID-19 situation in Honduras: lessons learned". Gaceta Médica de Caracas 128, S2 (1 de diciembre de 2020): S242—S250. http://dx.doi.org/10.47307/gmc.2020.128.s2.12.

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Introduction: Several emerging and re-emerging diseases in the last decade have shown the global weakness to detect and act in a timely manner in situations that threaten the health of the planet. Latin America has been vulnerable to outbreaks as a result of increased poverty, social inequity and the poor response capacity of the public health system. Objective: Describe the situation of COVID-19 in Honduras and the challenges it presents. Methodology: Analysis of the epidemiology and control strategies applied in the country to contain the spread of SARS-CoV-2, in the context of the social and economic reality until September 18, 2020. Results: Honduras ranks fifth in Central America in the number of tests performed; the cumulative incidence rate of cases is 7 105 per million inhabitants. The country has an accelerated growth in the percentage of positivity with intense community transmission. Some 63.4 % of cases are concentrated in the group 20-49 years old (43 624 cases); 15.2 % in adults 60+ (10 440 cases) and 7.5 % in children under 20 (5 133 cases). With a disjointed health system and a chronic and recurrent shortage of physical and human resources, the National Risk Management System (SINAGER), which includes the Ministry of Health (SESAL), implemented various strategies to reduce the spread of the virus. Some control measures were border closures, physical distancing and the use of masks were made mandatory by legislative decree. The serious impact on the weak national economy forced an intelligent opening coinciding with the rise of cases. Conclusions: Current data show that the age group most affected is adults between 20 and 49 years old. The country’s socioeconomic situation has been aggravated by the pandemic; the continuous rise in the number of cases, hospitalizations and deaths has collapsed the public health system leaving the majority of Hondurans in continuous vulnerability. Primary care clinics and mobile medical brigades have been implemented as a new way to contain the spread and impact of transmission. Several European countries and cities in the Americas have had to reverse the process of economic reopening when faced with successive waves of outbreaks. Honduras has demonstrated limited capacity to deal with catastrophic situations. The national epidemiological surveillance system and access to timely and quality diagnostic tests remain weak and fragmented. There is an urgent need to improve the health and surveillance system to guide strategic evidence-based decision making and to prevent future pandemics.
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Palmer, Carol J., Michael Makler, Winslow I. Klaskala, John F. Lindo, Marianna K. Baum y Arba L. Ager. "Increased prevalence of Plasmodium falciparum malaria in Honduras, Central America". Revista Panamericana de Salud Pública 4, n.º 1 (julio de 1998): 40–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s1020-49891998000700007.

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Stansifer, Charles L., Donald E. Schulz y Deborah Sundloff Schulz. "The United States, Honduras, and the Crisis in Central America." Hispanic American Historical Review 75, n.º 4 (noviembre de 1995): 729. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2518104.

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Jamail, Milton y Margo Gutierrez. "Israel in Central America: Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, Costa Rica". MERIP Middle East Report, n.º 140 (mayo de 1986): 26. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3012027.

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Vanden, Harry E. y Thomas P. Anderson. "Politics in Central America: Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua." Hispanic American Historical Review 70, n.º 4 (noviembre de 1990): 698. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2516600.

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Vanden, Harry E. "Politics in Central America: Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and Nicaragua". Hispanic American Historical Review 70, n.º 4 (1 de noviembre de 1990): 698. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00182168-70.4.698.

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30

Stansifer, Charles L. "The United States, Honduras, and the Crisis in Central America". Hispanic American Historical Review 75, n.º 4 (1 de noviembre de 1995): 729–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1215/00182168-75.4.729.

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Aiken, Carlos L., Mark E. Ander y Mauricio F. de la Fuente. "Geophysical investigations of the Platanares geothermal site, Honduras, Central America". Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research 45, n.º 1-2 (marzo de 1991): 71–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0377-0273(91)90023-s.

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32

Mora, José M., Mario R. Espinal y Lucia I. López. "New records on distribution and habitat of the lesser long-nosed bat (Leptonycteris yerbabuenae) in Honduras". Neotropical Biology and Conservation 15, n.º 4 (11 de diciembre de 2020): 521–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/neotropical.15.e57376.

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The lesser long-nosed bat (Leptonycteris yerbabuenae Martínez & Villa-R, 1940) is a specialized nectar feeding species found from southern USA to Nicaragua in Central America, mostly in dry forest. We sampled bats using mist nets and Anabat detectors, and also looked for them at refuges and other sites in Honduras from 2011 to 2016. The lesser long-nosed bat is known in Honduras from only two localities in the southern dry forests below 100 m elevation, and there are no recent records of this species in the country. Our objective is to report new records on distribution and habitat of the lesser long-nosed bat in Honduras. We found eight lesser long-nosed bats at Cerro de Hula, Francisco Morazán department in 2012, and 10 at La Anonilla, Choluteca department, southern Honduras in 2015. Based on these 18 individuals of the lesser long-nosed bat, we report two new localities in Honduras, an altitude record, and the use of another habitat other than the dry forest. The highest point registered was at 1710 m a.s.l. in pastureland with forest remnants in an area heavily impacted by human activities. The new localities are found in the Subtropical Moist Forest. Populations of long-nosed bats in Honduras are probably resident and may include altitudinal movements. Although this species has been described widely in North America, its behavior in Honduras is practically unknown. It is a key species for the tequila and mezcal industry, but its range extends beyond the tequila production area, where it maintains a key role as a pollinator and link between habitats. As a result, research and conservation efforts should be an international goal.
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33

Sullivan, Brittney J. y Janet Prvu Bettger. "Community-Informed Health Promotion to Improve Health Behaviors in Honduras". Journal of Transcultural Nursing 29, n.º 1 (26 de septiembre de 2016): 14–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1043659616670214.

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Background: Honduras is the second poorest country in Central America. The already high burden of disease is disproportionately worse among individuals with less education and limited access to health care. Community engagement is needed to bridge the gap in health care resources with the need for health promotion and education. Culturally relevant health promotion activities can foster transcultural partnerships. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to partner nursing students with village leaders to assess a community’s health needs and implement health promotion activities in Honduras. Design: Participatory action research was used in the study. Method: U.S. nursing students ( n = 4) partnered with a nonprofit organization and community partners in Villa Soleada to interview mothers in Villa Soleada, a Honduran village of 44 families, and implement health promotion activities targeted to the health priorities of their families. Results: Structured interviews with 24 mothers identified gastrointestinal issues, health care access and quality, and malaria as the top three priorities. Ninety-two percent of respondents were interested in nurse-led health promotion. Activities engaged new community partners. Discussion: This partnership and learning model was well received and sustainable. The U.S. nurses involved in the partnership gained exposure to Honduran health issues and led locally tailored health promotions in Villa Soleada. The community’s response to health promotion were positive and future activities were planned. Implications: Nursing student’s immersion experiences to support population-based health activities in low-resource settings are a replicable model that can help build healthier communities with a sustainable local infrastructure. Transcultural nursing experiences enhance students’ perspectives, increase personal and professional development, strengthen nursing students’ critical thinking skills, and for some students, confirm their desire to practice in an international arena.
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34

Rojas Alvarado, Carlos, Sergio Molina-Murillo y Robin G. Doss. "Perceptions of the use and value of fungi by two groups of young adults from Central America". UNED Research Journal 11, n.º 3 (1 de diciembre de 2019): 345–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.22458/urj.v11i3.2619.

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Introduction: Integrated efforts for the management and conservation of natural resources require the availability of socio-cultural information. However, perceptional studies are rarely used along with biological data to design methodologies of biodiversity conservation. Objective: To explore the potential of perceptional information on fungi as a tool for developing culture-sensitive methods of management and conservation. Methods: Through a survey-based design, ethnomycological information from urban settings in Honduras and Costa Rica was collected and evaluated for a group of young adults (16-25 years old, N=615 surveys). Results: Fungi were not perceived to have the value of plants and animals, in both countries. The latter were mentioned as preferred by 74% of respondents. By country, 39% of Costa Ricans mentioned the most important use of fungi to be food, whereas 58% of Hondurans responded a medicinal application. Remarkably, 27% of respondents in Costa Rica mentioned that fungi are important in ecological processes, much higher than Hondurans with only 7%. Conclusions: Exposure to formal education or previous cultural background may not play such an important role in shaping perceptions of the group of fungi as it does social aspects associated with the city lifestyle in the populations studied.
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35

Oakley, S. M., A. Pocasangre, C. Flores, J. Monge y M. Estrada. "Waste stabilization pond use in Central America: The experiences of El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua". Water Science and Technology 42, n.º 10-11 (1 de noviembre de 2000): 51–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wst.2000.0607.

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Within the last 15 years 34 waste stabilization pond systems have been built in Central America in the countries of El Salvador (6 systems), Honduras (12 systems), Guatemala (9 systems), and Nicaragua (8 systems); these systems were built for municipalities with populations ranging from 5,000 to 80,000 persons. There are 14 additional systems in the final design phase or under construction in the region, including the first designs for large cities: a 162 hectare facultative system for Managua, Nicaragua (population (1,000,000); and a 168 hectare system for San Pedro Sula, Honduras (population (640,000). Monitoring data from Honduras and Nicaragua show that treatment efficiency is generally comparable to tropical pond systems cited in the literature in other parts of the world, although fecal coliform removal has not been as good as theoretically predicted and the desludging of facultative ponds has been a significant operational cost. While waste stabilization ponds are generally considered the technology of choice for municipal wastewater treatment within Central America, there are, nevertheless, problem areas that need to be addressed if waste stabilization pond use is to have continued acceptance and long-term sustainability. These areas of concern at the regional level are: i) design guidelines using parameters from data developed in Central America; ii) effluent guidelines that are realistic for pond effluents for reuse or surface water discharge; iii) monitoring programs focusing specifically on pathogen removal; iv) cost-effective grit removal and sludge removal from facultative ponds; v) improving designs for pathogen removal; vi) the need for centralized (El Salvador and Nicaragua) versus decentralized (Guatemala and Honduras) mechanisms for financing and operation and maintenance; vii) the development of comparative cost data for construction, operation and maintenance, pond desludging, and microbiological monitoring; and viii) the development of training programs for design, operationand maintenance, and monitoring.
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36

Sosa-Ochoa, Wilfredo, Concepción Zúniga, Luis Fernando Chaves, Gabriela Venicia Araujo Flores, Carmen Maria Sandoval Pacheco, Vania Lúcia Ribeiro da Matta, Carlos Eduardo Pereira Corbett, Fernando Tobias Silveira y Marcia Dalastra Laurenti. "Clinical and Immunological Features of Human Leishmania (L.) infantum-Infection, Novel Insights Honduras, Central America". Pathogens 9, n.º 7 (10 de julio de 2020): 554. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pathogens9070554.

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Leishmania (Leishmania) infantum is the etiological agent of both American visceral leishmaniasis (AVL) and non-ulcerated cutaneous leishmaniasis (NUCL) in Honduras. Although AVL is the most severe clinical form of infection, recent studies have shown that human immune response to parasite infection can result in a clinical-immunological spectrum. The overall prevalence rate of infection and clinical-immunological profiles of the L. (L.) infantum infection in Amapala municipality, South Honduras was determined. We examined 576 individuals with diagnosis based on combined ELISA (IgG/IgM) and DTH assays. We also used genus-specific kDNA PCR and Hsp70 PCR-RFLP for NUCL cases. Clinical evaluation found 82% asymptomatic and 18% symptomatic individuals. All symptomatic cases (n = 104) showing NUCL were positive for parasites. We identified L. (L.) infantum species in 100% of the skin lesion scrapings and in 90% of the blood samples from NUCL cases studied. A total of 320 asymptomatic individuals were exposed (ELISA+ and/or DTH+), providing an overall L. (L.) infantum prevalence of 73.6%. Clinical, parasitological, and immunological evaluations suggest seven infection profiles, three asymptomatic and four symptomatic. This represents the first report on clinical and immunological features of human L. (L.) infantum-infection in Amapala municipality, Honduras.
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37

Cruz, José Miguel. "Criminal Violence and Democratization in Central America: The Survival of the Violent State". Latin American Politics and Society 53, n.º 04 (2011): 1–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-2456.2011.00132.x.

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AbstractWhy does Nicaragua have less violent crime than Guatemala, El Salvador, and Honduras? All these countries underwent political transitions in the 1990s. Many explanations point to the legacies of war, socioeconomic underdevelopment, and neoliberal structural reforms. However, these arguments do not fully explain why, despite economic reforms conducted throughout the region, war-less Honduras and wealthier Guatemala and El Salvador have much more crime than Nicaragua. This article argues that public security reforms carried out during the political transitions shaped the ability of the new regimes to control the violence produced by their own institutions and collaborators. In the analysis of the crisis of public security, it is important to bring the state back. The survival of violent entrepreneurs in the new security apparatus and their relationship with new governing elites foster the conditions for the escalation of violence in northern Central America.
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38

DROBE, J. "Cu-Au Skarn Mineralization, Minas de Oro District, Honduras, Central America". Exploration and Mining Geology 9, n.º 1 (1 de enero de 2000): 51–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.2113/0090051.

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Ives, Diogo y Bruno Gomes Guimarães. "Anti-corruption organisms and US hegemony in Central America". Conjuntura Austral 7, n.º 37 (17 de septiembre de 2016): 04. http://dx.doi.org/10.22456/2178-8839.65363.

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Esse texto analisa como os organismos de combate à corrupção na América Central garantem o domínio dos EUA sobre a região. Essas instituições parecem ter defendido interesses estadunidenses na Guatemala, em Honduras e em El Salvador em um contexto de crescente disputa com a China. Sugerimos que os países ocidentais foquem-se em medidas domésticas para combater a corrupção no exterior e que órgãos internacionais respeitem a soberania dos países afetados.
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40

CAMBRONERO-SOLANO, SERGIO, R. BENAVIDES, F. A. SOLÍS-MARÍN y J. J. ALVARADO. "New reports of echinoderms on the Caribbean continental slope of central America". Zoosymposia 15, n.º 1 (21 de octubre de 2019): 5–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zoosymposia.15.1.3.

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The Caribbean is considered a unique biogeographic region that represents an important hotspot of marine diversity in the Atlantic Ocean. The Caribbean Continental Slope of Central America (CCCA) is a largely unexplored area that exhibits a variety of habitats. Among this unstudied biodiversity, special importance has been given to the benthic communities associated with deep bottoms, a diverse group that plays a major role in the ocean carbon cycling and nutrient flux. Echinoderms are one of the main benthic deep sea taxa, in which Holothuroidea is the globally dominant class. We present the results from the first exploratory fishing survey campaign on the CCCA, done under the regional coordination of OSPESCA (Central America Fisheries and Aquaculture Organization) on board of the R/V Miguel Oliver in January 2011. Data was collected from a total of 96 trawls arranged in 25 transects that started in Panama and finished in Belize. A Lofoten bottom trawling net was dragged for 30 min between 0 to 1500m depth. The major component of the total invertebrate catch was Holothuroidea with a biomass of 593 kg (16.49% of the total) and represented by seven species. The following are new reports for the Caribbean: Bathyplotes natans in Honduras and Guatemala, Bentothuria funebris in Panama, Benthodytes sanguinolenta in Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Belize; Hansenothuria sp. in Panama, Costa Rica and Honduras. Paroriza pallens extends its distribution to Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Honduras, Zygothuria lactea its reported in Panama. We also present the first records of the crinoid Neocomatella pulchella in Honduras, theasteroid Cheiraster (Cheiraster) planusin Panama, and, for Costa Rica (Asteroidea: Doraster constellatus and Echinoidea: Clypeaster euclastus).Holothurians are the predominant invertebrate fauna in terms of biomass in the entire region of the CCCA. These findings suggest that CCCA presents a high echinoderm biodiversity and also supports the ecoregional variation theory. We report higher echinoderm biomass (75%) in the Southwestern Caribbean compared to Western Caribbean ecoregion. The information presented in this paper establishes the baseline information of echinoderms depth fauna in the Caribbean of Central America, and opens new opportunities for future research.
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VAN DEN BERGHE, ERIC, JEAN-MICHEL MAES, FERNANDO HERNÁNDEZ-BAZ y JORGE M. GONZÁLEZ. "Synopsis of the Castniidae (Lepidoptera) from Honduras and Nicaragua, Central America". Zootaxa 4895, n.º 2 (15 de diciembre de 2020): 272–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4895.2.6.

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We present a catalog of nine taxa of Castniidae reported for Nicaragua and Honduras including Prometheus zagraea salvina, a first record for Nicaragua. We also include general and field observations of behavior to help explain why members of this family are poorly represented in collections.
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42

TOWNSEND, JOSIAH H. "Taxonomic revision of the moss salamander Nototriton barbouri (Schmidt (Caudata: Plethodontidae), with description of two new species from the Cordillera Nombre de Dios, Honduras". Zootaxa 4196, n.º 4 (24 de noviembre de 2016): 511. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4196.4.3.

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Moss salamanders (genus Nototriton) are represented in northern Central America by nine putative species: N. barbouri, N. brodiei, N. lignicola, N. limnospectator, N. mime, N. picucha, N. saslaya, N. stuarti, and N. tomamorum. I estimate the phylogenetic relationships for these species based on data from three mitochondrial gene fragments (16S, cytochrome b, and COI), and compare morphological variation among putative taxa. As evidenced here and in previous studies, the taxon N. barbouri is paraphyletic with respect to populations from the Cordillera Nombre de Dios in northern Honduras. I restrict this taxon to populations from the Sierra de Sulaco in central Yoro, Honduras, and describe two new species from the Cordillera Nombre de Dios.
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43

Mora, José M. y Lucía I. López. "First Record of the Hoary Bat (Lasiurus cinereus, Vespertilionidae) for Honduras". Ceiba 51, n.º 2 (23 de agosto de 2013): 89–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.5377/ceiba.v51i2.1188.

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The distribution of the hoary bat (Lasiurus cinereus) extends from Canada to Chile, and it includes several islands in the Caribbean, Atlantic and Pacific oceans including Hawaii. The species seems to be a rare visitor to Central America where it has been reported from Guatemala and Panama. Here we report the first record for the hoary bat from Honduras which confirms its expected presence in other countries of the region. The specimen was found at a vegetation open area on Cerro de Hula, Santa Ana Municipality; 20 km south of Tegucigalpa, Honduras capital, on July 27, 2012.DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5377/ceiba.v51i2.1188
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44

Omar, Husam y Monica Gallant. "Palestinian Entrepreneurs in Honduras: A Case of Success and Triumph in the Diaspora". Journal of Research in Administrative Sciences 9, n.º 2 (15 de diciembre de 2020): 36–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.47609/jras2020v9i2p6.

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Through the years, Palestinians have immigrated to Central America where they have been able to assimilate into a diverse cultural environment while still maintaining a strong link to their cultural heritage. Additionally, certain individuals have been able to prosper financially through the development of increasingly significant business enterprises. Through an analysis of in-depth interviews with three successful Palestinian entrepreneurs now established in Honduras, it is evident that these immigrants used energy, wit, common sense, hard work, and financial resources not only to survive but also to flourish. Their stories highlight how their success developed from peddling, to business ownership, to stock market investing. Keywords: Palestinian entrepreneurs, Honduras, abonos, peddling
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45

Omar, Husam y Monica Gallant. "Palestinian Entrepreneurs in Honduras: A Case of Success and Triumph in the Diaspora". Journal of Research in Administrative Sciences 9, n.º 2 (15 de diciembre de 2020): 36–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.47609/jras2020v9i2p6.

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Through the years, Palestinians have immigrated to Central America where they have been able to assimilate into a diverse cultural environment while still maintaining a strong link to their cultural heritage. Additionally, certain individuals have been able to prosper financially through the development of increasingly significant business enterprises. Through an analysis of in-depth interviews with three successful Palestinian entrepreneurs now established in Honduras, it is evident that these immigrants used energy, wit, common sense, hard work, and financial resources not only to survive but also to flourish. Their stories highlight how their success developed from peddling, to business ownership, to stock market investing. Keywords: Palestinian entrepreneurs, Honduras, abonos, peddling
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46

Marineros, Leonel y Hector Orlando Portillo Reyes. "ACTUALIZACIÓN DE LA DISTRIBUCIÓN Y NOTAS SOBRE EL PEREZOSO DE TRES GARRAS Bradypus variegatus castaneiceps (Pilosa: Bradipodidae) EN HONDURAS". Revista Mexicana de Mastozoología (Nueva Epoca) 5, n.º 1 (30 de junio de 2015): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.22201/ie.20074484e.2015.5.1.202.

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RESUMENSe presentan 15 nuevas localidades de encuentros con perezosos de tres dedos Bradypus variegatus castaneiceps (Pilosa: Bradypodidae) en Honduras. Se confirma la existencia de esta especie en los departamentos de El Paraíso y Atlántida; con ello, se amplía la distribución por la cuenca del Río Segovia (frontera con Nicaragua) y por la costa Caribe de Honduras. Adicionalmente esta investigación propone una distribución espacial potencial de esta especie en el país basada en afinidad de caracteres fisiográficos con el programa MaxEnt. El estudio incluye también el registro de una cría en el mes de abril del 2013, se discuten los nombres locales de este animal en Honduras. Se evalúa las acciones de conservación en el país.Palabras clave: Ampliación, área de distribución, Centroamérica, three-toed sloth, probable ocurrencia, nuevos registros, MaxEnt.ABSTRACTWe present 15 new records for the brown three-toed sloth, Bradypus variegatus castaneiceps (Pilosa: Bradypodidae) in Honduras. These records confirm the existence of this specie in the departments of El Paraiso and Atlántida, and expand its geographical distribution from the watershed of the Rio Segovia (border with Nicaraguan) to along the Caribbean coast of Honduras. Additionally, we propose a potential spatial distribution of the specie based on the relationship between records and physiographic characteristics using the program MaxEnt. We document the presence of a juvenile in April 2013 and include a discussion of the common names of three-toed sloths in Honduras. We furthermore evaluate the position of this species on the List of Species of Special Concern and the qualification of its status as least concern (LC) in the IUCN Red ListKey words: Range extension, Central America, brown-throated sloth, probable occurrence, new records, MaxEnt
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47

Kim, Sungduk, Hojin Lee y Kye-Won Jun. "The Impacts of Debris Torrents in Caribbean Coast of Honduras, Central America". Journal of Coastal Research 75, sp1 (3 de marzo de 2016): 1347–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.2112/si75-270.1.

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Salgado-Maldonado, Guillermo, Wilfredo A. Matamoros, Brian R. Kreiser, Juan Manuel Caspeta-Mandujano y Edgar F. Mendoza-Franco. "First record of the invasive Asian fish tapewormBothriocephalus acheilognathiin Honduras, Central America". Parasite 22 (2015): 5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/parasite/2015007.

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Goff, F., S. J. Goff, S. Kelkar, L. Shevenell, A. H. Truesdell, J. Musgrave, H. Rufenacht y W. Flores. "Exploration drilling and reservoir model of platanares geothermal system, Honduras, Central America". International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences & Geomechanics Abstracts 28, n.º 6 (noviembre de 1991): A364. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0148-9062(91)91396-9.

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KOHLMANN, BERT, ENIO CANO y LEONARDO DELGADO. "New species and records of Copris (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae; Scarabaeinae) from Central America". Zootaxa 167, n.º 1 (24 de marzo de 2003): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.167.1.1.

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Two new species of Copris Geoffroy from Guatemala and Honduras are described and illustrated: Copris caliginosus sp. nov. and Copris nubilosus sp. nov. Both species are related to C. sallei Harold, which is redescribed and illustrated for the first time. A key for the remotus complex is also included. New distributional records of Copris are provided for five species and subspecies from Guatemala and El Salvador.
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