“…Clayton (Contreras-Ramos et al, 2013;Tucuch-Cauich, Orona-Castro, Almeyda-León, & Aguirre-Uribe, 2013). In Oasis, the invasive vine C. grandiflora, makes the habitat unsuitable for birds and reptiles (Rodríguez-Estrella et al, 2010). The environmental effects of E. crassipes are mixed, as it may harbor Anopheles albimannus C. R. G. Wiedemann, 1820, a malarial vector (Savage, Rejmankova, Arredondo-Jiménez, Roberts, & Rodríguez, 1990), some free living amoebae pathogenic to humans (Ramírez, Robles, & Martínez, 2010), reduce water quality (Gutiérrez, Huerto, Saldana, & Arreguín, 1996;Lind & Davalos-Lind, 2002), or become inhospitable to small migratory birds (Villamagna, Murphy, & Karpanty, 2012), but E. crassipes also may harbor a great diversity of invertebrates and function as preferred foraging habitat for coots (Hernández et al, 2015;Rocha-Ramírez, Ramírez-Rojas, & Chávez-López, 2007;Rocha-Ramírez, Robles-Valderrama, & Ramírez-Flores, 2014;Román-Contreras, Rocha-Ramírez, & Cházaro-Olvera, 2008;Villamagna, Murphy, & Trauger, 2010).…”