A large number of
published ecological studies fail to include basic information about the climate data used.
Not exact matches
The
study,
published by EcoHealth Alliance's Dr. Kevin Olival and Dr. David Hayman from Massey University, reviewed all of the current literature on filoviruses — the class of viruses that include both Ebola and Marburg virus — and took a critical look at the
ecological and virological methods needed to understand these viruses to protect human health.
The results of the
study by Thomas Newsome and William Ripple in the Oregon State University Department of Forest Ecosystems and Society were
published in the Journal of Animal Ecology by the British
Ecological Society.
The
study, «Homogenizing an Urban Habitat Mosaic: Arthropod diversity declines in New York City parks after Super Storm Sandy,» was
published in the journal
Ecological Applications.
The
study,
published in
Ecological Modelling, was funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council.
The
study was recently
published online in the journal
Ecological Applications.
Now a pilot
study, in which more than 1,100 hours of birdsong were analyzed, is available in the journal
Ecological Research which is the official journal of the
Ecological Society of Japan and is
published by Springer.
In a
study published this month in
Ecological Entomology, biologists picked out brooding females from solitary and social nests, transferred them into new webs, and forced them to go it alone.
«It seems to have worked for at least one of the congeners
studied,» says Tim Mattes, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering and corresponding author on the paper,
published in the journal
Ecological Engineering.
The findings of the
study conducted by a working group at UC Santa Barbara's National Center for
Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS) and funded by the National Science Foundation were
published today in the Proceedings B, a journal of the Royal Society of Biological Sciences.
Examining the peer - review process for every paper submitted to Functional Ecology between January 2004 and June 2014, authors Charles W. Fox and C. Sean Burns of the University of Kentucky in Lexington and Jennifer A. Meyer of the British
Ecological Society in London, United Kingdom, which
publishes the journal, found that most of the Functional Ecology reviewers were men, but female reviewers became more numerous over the period
studied.
A
study published in
Ecological Applications led by Professor John Swaddle, visiting Research Associate at the University of Exeter, found that filling a controlled area with acoustic noise around an airfield, where the majority of collisions tend to take place, can reduce the number of birds in the area by 80 per cent.
«The original
ecological footprint is a good metaphor and a good way of getting us thinking about overusing the planet, but what you really want a footprint to do is to be a management tool,» says Peter Kareiva, co-author of the
study,
published November 5 in PLoS Biology.
A previous
study estimated that the R2 of most
ecological research ranges was between 0.02 and 0.05, but few researchers will
publish results with such small explanatory power.
Parchman, who specializes in evolutionary and
ecological genetics in in the University's College of Science, is the lead author on a recently
published scientific paper in the journal Molecular Ecology detailing the
study, a culmination of several years of work with his colleagues Alex Buerkle and Craig Benkman of the University of Wyoming, and Victor Soria - Carrasco of University of Sheffield, UK.
The
study — the first to experimentally investigate the role of flower shape and size in sexually deceptive orchids — is
published in the British
Ecological Society's journal Functional Ecology.
The Blue Mountains case
study is part of an open access special issue on «Social -
ecological systems in mountain landscapes» published online in the Ecological Society of America's journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment (http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/fee.2018.16.
ecological systems in mountain landscapes»
published online in the
Ecological Society of America's journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment (http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/fee.2018.16.
Ecological Society of America's journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment (http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/fee.2018.16.issue-S1).
The
study, «
Ecological genomics meets community - level modeling of biodiversity: mapping the genomic landscape of current and future environmental adaptation,» was
published by Matthew Fitzpatrick of the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science and Steven Keller of the University of Vermont.
The
study, «Beneath the Canopy: Tropical forests enrolled in conservation payments reveal evidence of less degradation,» recently was
published in the current issue of
Ecological Economics.
That
study was
published in 2016 in the journal
Ecological Applications.
The
study's basic assumption, Calcagno says, is that scientific
publishing can be
studied as a network, much like the
ecological food webs that he
studies.
The
study,
published in the April issue of
Ecological Applications, pinpoints danger zones where turtles and trawlers meet.
A new
study by JCU PhD student Anna Pintor,
published in the journal
Ecological Monographs, is one of the first to test the Climatic Variability Hypothesis (CVH)-- which proposes that animals living in environmentally variable areas should be able to tolerate more environmental fluctuations as a result.
The new
study,
published in the journal PLOS ONE, makes an analogy between the largest companies in seafood industry and keystone species in
ecological communities.
Two recently
published studies detail the cycle of oxygen depletion in the lake's bottom waters, and the
ecological impacts from bacteria to fish.
A second
Ecological Footprint
study was
published in 2013, with a special focus on the Laguna Lake Region, the country's largest lake ecosystem, which includes Metro Manila — the most densely populated area on Earth and most vulnerable region in the country.
(02/27/2008) More than half the Amazon rainforest will be damaged or destroyed within 20 years if deforestation, forest fires, and climate trends continue apace, warns a
study published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. Reviewing recent trends in economic,
ecological and climatic processes in Amazonia, Daniel Nepstad and colleagues forecast that 55 percent of Amazon forests will be «cleared, logged, damaged by drought, or burned» in the next 20 years.
Finally, Patrick Michaels is an
ecological climatologist who occasionally
publishes peer - reviewed
studies, but none that support his more outlandish claims.
(09/16/2008) Pollination services provided by insects are worth $ 216 billion ($ 153 billion) a year reports a new
study published in
Ecological Economics.