Vertebrate ecology and evolution in `Deep Time¿
Bruce J. MacFadden
pág. 355
The importance in fishery management of leaving the big ones
Paul K. Dayton, Charles Birkeland
págs. 356-358
Hybridization, transgressive segregation, genetic covariation, and adaptive radiation
Michael A. Bell, Matthew P. Travis
págs. 358-361
Organisms in nature as a central focus for biology
Lawrence M. Page
págs. 361-362
Data sharing in ecology and evolution
Michael P. Cummings, Cynthia S. Parr
págs. 362-363
Kevin R. Foster, Francis L.W. Ratnieks
págs. 363-364
Extinction: past as key to the present
Nan Crystal Arens
pág. 365
Can you see the wood for the trees?
Christopher J. Creevey
pág. 366
págs. 367-373
`Haldane's Sieve¿ in a metapopulation: sifting through plant reproductive polymorphisms
Marcel E. Dorken, John R. Pannell, Sarah M. Eppley
págs. 374-379
New paradigms for supporting the resilience of marine ecosystems
Carl Folke, Terence P. Hughes, Robert S. Steneck, James Wilson, David R. Bellwood
págs. 380-386
Fire as a global `herbivore¿: the ecology and evolution of flammable ecosystems
William J. Bond, Jon E. Keeley
págs. 387-394
Fifty millennia of catastrophic extinctions after human contact
David A. Burney, Timothy F. Flannery
págs. 395-401
Body size in ecological networks
Philip H. Warren, Guy Woodward, Bo Ebenman, Mark Emmerson, Jose M. Montoya, Alfredo Valido, Jens M. Olesen
págs. 402-409
© 2001-2024 Fundación Dialnet · Todos los derechos reservados