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Page 11 of 13

  1. The transition from water to land was a key event in the evolution of vertebrates that occurred over a period of 15–20 million years towards the end of the Devonian. Tetrapods, including all land-living verteb...

    Authors: Nathan S Hart, Helena J Bailes, Misha Vorobyev, N Justin Marshall and Shaun P Collin
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2008 8:21
  2. Plant defense strategy is usually a result of trade-offs between growth and differentiation (i.e. Optimal Defense Theory – ODT, Growth Differentiation Balance hypothesis – GDB, Plant Apparency Theory – PAT). I...

    Authors: Gérard Pergent, Charles-François Boudouresque, Olivier Dumay, Christine Pergent-Martini and Sandy Wyllie-Echeverria
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2008 8:20
  3. Ninety-one rodent plague epidemics have occurred in Lianghe county, Yunnan Province, China, between 1990 and 2006. This study aimed to identify predictors for the presence and abundance of small mammals in hou...

    Authors: Jia-Xiang Yin, Alan Geater, Virasakdi Chongsuvivatwong, Xing-Qi Dong, Chun-Hong Du, You-Hong Zhong and Edward McNeil
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2008 8:18
  4. At depths below 10 m, reefs are dominated by blue-green light because seawater selectively absorbs the longer, 'red' wavelengths beyond 600 nm from the downwelling sunlight. Consequently, the visual pigments o...

    Authors: Nico K Michiels, Nils Anthes, Nathan S Hart, Jürgen Herler, Alfred J Meixner, Frank Schleifenbaum, Gregor Schulte, Ulrike E Siebeck, Dennis Sprenger and Matthias F Wucherer
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2008 8:16
  5. Understanding the dispersal and genetic structure of invasive insects across islands is important for designing management plans that are appropriate at spatial and temporal scales. For invasive parasites, pop...

    Authors: Rachael Y Dudaniec, Michael G Gardner, Steve Donnellan and Sonia Kleindorfer
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2008 8:13
  6. In the androdioecious nematode Caenorhabditis elegans virtually all progeny produced by hermaphrodite self-fertilization is hermaphrodite while 50% of the progeny that results from cross-fertilization by a male i...

    Authors: Viktoria Wegewitz, Hinrich Schulenburg and Adrian Streit
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2008 8:12
  7. Tobler's first law of geography, 'Everything is related to everything else, but near things are more related than distant things' also applies to biological systems as illustrated by a general and strong occur...

    Authors: Stine Bjorholm, Jens-Christian Svenning, Flemming Skov and Henrik Balslev
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2008 8:11
  8. The Brazilian Atlantic Forest is highly endangered and only about 7% of the original forest remains, most of which consists of fragments of secondary forest. Small mammals in the Atlantic Forest have different...

    Authors: Thomas Püttker, Renata Pardini, Yvonne Meyer-Lucht and Simone Sommer
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2008 8:9
  9. Meiofauna – multicellular animals captured between sieve size 45 μm and 1000 μm – are a fundamental component of terrestrial, and marine benthic ecosystems, forming an integral element of food webs, and playin...

    Authors: Chester J Sands, Peter Convey, Katrin Linse and Sandra J McInnes
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2008 8:7
  10. Plotless density estimators are those that are based on distance measures rather than counts per unit area (quadrats or plots) to estimate the density of some usually stationary event, e.g. burrow openings, da...

    Authors: Neil A White, Richard M Engeman, Robert T Sugihara and Heather W Krupa
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2008 8:6
  11. Anopheles darlingi is the most important malaria vector in the Neotropics. An understanding of A. darlingi's population structure and contemporary gene flow patterns is necessary if vector populations are to be s...

    Authors: Lisa Mirabello, Joseph H Vineis, Stephen P Yanoviak, Vera M Scarpassa, Marinete M Póvoa, Norma Padilla, Nicole L Achee and Jan E Conn
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2008 8:3
  12. Competitive displacement of a weakly virulent pathogen strain by a more virulent strain is one route to disease emergence. However the mechanisms by which pathogens compete for access to hosts are poorly under...

    Authors: Kathryn A Hanley, Jacob T Nelson, Erin E Schirtzinger, Stephen S Whitehead and Christopher T Hanson
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2008 8:1
  13. According to the classical model of Macevicz and Oster, annual eusocial insects should show a clear dichotomous "bang-bang" strategy of resource allocation; colony fitness is maximised when a period of pure co...

    Authors: Oliver Mitesser, Norbert Weissel, Erhard Strohm and Hans-Joachim Poethke
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2007 7:16
  14. Antarctic terrestrial vegetation is subject to one of the most extreme climates on Earth. Currently, parts of Antarctica are one of the fastest warming regions on the planet. During 3 growing seasons, we inves...

    Authors: Stef Bokhorst, Ad Huiskes, Peter Convey and Rien Aerts
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2007 7:15
  15. Free-ranging narwhals (Monodon monoceros) were instrumented in Admiralty Inlet, Canada with both satellite tags to study migration and stock separation and short-term, high-resolution digital archival tags to exp...

    Authors: Rune Dietz, Ari D Shapiro, Mehdi Bakhtiari, Jack Orr, Peter L Tyack, Pierre Richard, Ida Grønborg Eskesen and Greg Marshall
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2007 7:14
  16. There is much debate concerning which ecological constraints are the most limiting factors to seedling recruitment in disturbed communities. We provide the first comparison between selective herbivory and plan...

    Authors: Michael H Parsons, Christine M Rafferty, Byron B Lamont, Kenneth Dods and Meredith M Fairbanks
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2007 7:13
  17. Pheromones play an important role for mate finding and courtship in many insects. In species where males are the signaling sex, females are expected to choose among potential mates with regard to the emitter's...

    Authors: Martin Kaltenpoth, Johannes Kroiss and Erhard Strohm
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2007 7:11
  18. Changes in land surface phenology are of major importance to the understanding of the impact of recent and future climate changes in the Arctic. This paper presents an extensive study from Zackenberg Ecologica...

    Authors: Mikkel P Tamstorf, Lotte Illeris, Birger U Hansen and Mary Wisz
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2007 7:9
  19. In most regions of the world human influences on the distribution of flora and fauna predate complete biotic surveys. In some cases this challenges our ability to discriminate native from introduced species. T...

    Authors: Ronald M Bonett, Kenneth H Kozak, David R Vieites, Alison Bare, Jessica A Wooten and Stanley E Trauth
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2007 7:7
  20. The endemic seagrass Posidonia oceanica (L.) Delile colonizes soft bottoms producing highly productive meadows that play a crucial role in coastal ecosystems dynamics. Human activities and natural events are resp...

    Authors: Luciana Migliore, Alice Rotini, Davide Randazzo, Nadia N Albanese and Agata Giallongo
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2007 7:6
  21. Correspondence regarding Wilting A, Fischer F, Bakar SA, Linsenmair KE: Clouded leopards, the secretive top-carnivore of South-East Asian rainforests: their distribution, status and conservation needs in Sabah, M...

    Authors: Chris H Gordon, Anne-Marie E Stewart and Erik Meijaard
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2007 7:5
  22. Determining the relative contribution of intrinsic and extrinsic factors to fluctuations in population size, trends and demographic composition is analytically complex. It is often only possible to examine the...

    Authors: Siobhan C de Little, Corey JA Bradshaw, Clive R McMahon and Mark A Hindell
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2007 7:3
  23. Giant Galápagos tortoises on the island of Española have been the focus of an intensive captive breeding-repatriation programme for over 35 years that saved the taxon from extinction. However, analysis of 118 ...

    Authors: Michel C Milinkovitch, Daniel Monteyne, Michael Russello, James P Gibbs, Howard L Snell, Washington Tapia, Cruz Marquez, Adalgisa Caccone and Jeffrey R Powell
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2007 7:2
  24. We investigated the feeding ecology and habitat use of 32 harbour porpoises by-caught in 4 localities along the Scandinavian coast from the North Sea to the Barents Sea using time-integrative markers: stable i...

    Authors: Michaël C Fontaine, Krystal A Tolley, Ursula Siebert, Sylvie Gobert, Gilles Lepoint, Jean-Marie Bouquegneau and Krishna Das
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2007 7:1
  25. Phages are thought to play a crucial role in the maintenance of diversity in natural bacterial communities. Theory suggests that phages impose density dependent regulation on bacterial populations, preventing ...

    Authors: Michael A Brockhurst, Andrew Fenton, Barrie Roulston and Paul B Rainey
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2006 6:19
  26. In Europe the mountain hare (Lepus timidus) exists in Great Britain, Norway, Sweden, Finland, parts of the Alps and in Eastern Europe, but not in Denmark. Interspecific hybridization has been demonstrated between...

    Authors: Tina Fredsted, Trine Wincentz and Palle Villesen
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2006 6:17
  27. The continued depletion of tropical rainforests and fragmentation of natural habitats has led to significant ecological changes which place most top carnivores under heavy pressure. Various methods have been u...

    Authors: Andreas Wilting, Frauke Fischer, Soffian Abu Bakar and K Eduard Linsenmair
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2006 6:16
  28. Morus boninensis, is an endemic plant of the Bonin (Ogasawara) Islands of Japan and is categorized as "critically endangered" in the Japanese red data book. However, little information is available about its ecol...

    Authors: Naoki Tani, Hiroshi Yoshimaru, Takayuki Kawahara, Yoshio Hoshi, Fuyuo Nobushima and Takaya Yasui
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2006 6:14
  29. Within semi-closed areas like the Mediterranean Sea, anthropic wastes tend to concentrate in the environment. Metals, in particular, are known to persist in the environment and can affect human health due to a...

    Authors: Marc Gosselin, Jean-Marie Bouquegneau, Frédéric Lefèbvre, Gilles Lepoint, Gerard Pergent, Christine Pergent-Martini and Sylvie Gobert
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2006 6:12
  30. Marine turtles deposit their eggs on tropical or subtropical beaches during discrete nesting seasons that span several months. The number and distribution of nests laid during a nesting season provide vital in...

    Authors: Marc Girondot, Philippe Rivalan, Ronald Wongsopawiro, Jean-Paul Briane, Vincent Hulin, Stéphane Caut, Elodie Guirlet and Matthew H Godfrey
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2006 6:11
  31. Major changes in climate have been observed in the Arctic and climate models predict further amplification of the enhanced greenhouse effect at high-latitudes leading to increased warming. We propose that warm...

    Authors: David M Kristensen, Thomas R Jørgensen, Rasmus K Larsen, Mads C Forchhammer and Kirsten S Christoffersen
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2006 6:10
  32. Network analyses of plant-animal interactions hold valuable biological information. They are often used to quantify the degree of specialization between partners, but usually based on qualitative indices such ...

    Authors: Nico Blüthgen, Florian Menzel and Nils Blüthgen
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2006 6:9
  33. The fertilization success in sperm competition in externally fertilizing fish depends on number and quality of sperm. The time delay between sequential ejaculations may further influence the outcome of sperm c...

    Authors: Theo CM Bakker, Marc Zbinden, Joachim G Frommen, Alexander Weiss and Carlo R Largiadèr
    Citation: BMC Ecology 2006 6:7