免费外网加速器- 旋风加速器官网
Explore here
免费外网加速器- 旋风加速器官网
Help students and early career ecologists get exposure in the virtual meeting by taking the #ESAWatchParty2024 Challenge, and follow the hashtag to amplify new voices in science!
Read more免费外网加速器- 旋风加速器官网
Help us show how natural history and biodiversity can create communities across generational and geographical barriers -- compete in the International Biodiversity Championship during the meeting!
Read moreMore Ways to Grow
The 2024 Annual Meeting will include one-on-one "speed dating" with our EICs, professional development in Career Central, and deep dives into the 4DEE ecology education framework. Explore!
Read more免费外网加速器- 旋风加速器官网
-
免费外网加速器- 旋风加速器官网
Anthropogenic climate change is threatening biodiversity globally. The June edition of Frontiers is a themed, open-access, Special Issue focusing on climate-change refugia (areas buffered from climate-change effects over time). For instance, populations of plants like the encrusted saxifrage (Saxifraga paniculata) grow along the shores of Lake Superior where summer temperatures are moderated by the lake’s cold waters. By fostering conditions that are suitable for relict arctic-alpine plants, these microclimates may serve as climate-change refugia.
iphone国内看youtube
-
iphone怎样能看youtube
Through combining long-term photo-identification with fine-scale movement patterns of individual sea turtles, Schofield et al. show that female sea turtles have better survival rates than males, possibly because males tend to occupy sites closer to shore, increasing interactions with anthropogenic threats. Their results are reported in the July issue of Ecology and show that long‐term identification, coupled with tracking, offers great promise for estimating the survival rates of other wide‐ranging species.
Read more
-
Ecosphere
The B mitotype of 苹果怎么看youtube was introduced to neotropical agroecosystems of South America in the 1990s, leading to the displacement of indigenous whitefly mitotypes from monoculture vegetable production systems. In the June issue of Ecosphere, Paredes-Montero et al. report on a large-scale sampling carried out in Ecuador that discovered higher-than-expected diversity of non-invasive mitotypes of B. tabaci in the neotropics and a spatial distribution analysis that revealed ecological resilience among endemic Ecuadorian mitotypes to potential displacement by the B mitotype.
Read more
-
Ecological Applications
Although birds on farms commonly eat strawberries and other crops, research by Olimpi et al. published in the July issue of iphone怎样能看youtube revealed that birds also suppress invertebrate pests which can be a greater threat to the berry production than the birds themselves.
Read more
-
iphone国内看youtube
Elephants and other non-ruminants are estimated to have high water requirements, even when corrected for body size. In the May issue of Ecological Monographs, Kihwele et al. quantify the water requirements of 48 African ungulates using a set of functional traits related to water losses. Their results suggest each single trait is a valuable indicator of ungulate water requirements.
Read more
-
Bulletin
In the July issue of the ESA Bulletin, Lockwood et al. present a new use of the arts to communicate science to the public: ecological opera!
Read more
免费外网加速器- 旋风加速器官网
- University of California Berkeley: Assistant/Associate/Full Professor - Climate Equity and Environmental Justice July 28, 2024
- Oak Ridge National Lab: Postdoctoral Research Associate - Coastal Wetland Biogeochemical Modeling July 9, 2024
- Oak Ridge National Lab: Postdoctoral Research Associate - Coastal Wetland Vegetation Modeling July 9, 2024
- Yale School of the Environment: Faculty Position in Environmental Policy and Governance July 6, 2024
- UMCES APPALACHIAN LABORATORY: Postdoctoral Scholar in Hydrology of Indonesian Peatlands July 6, 2024