Global Environmental Change and Human Well-Being

Works Published in 2006

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Displaying all 7 works

Sorted by most recent date added to the index first, which may not be the same as publication date order.

2006 journal article

The Consequences of Direct versus Indirect Species Interactions to Selection on Traits: Pollination and Nectar Robbing in <i>Ipomopsis aggregata

The American Naturalist, 167(3), 315–328.

By: R. Irwin*

Source: Crossref
Added: February 24, 2024

2006 journal article

Correlations among traits associated with herbivore resistance and pollination: implications for pollination and nectar robbing in a distylous plant

American Journal of Botany, 93(1), 64–72.

TL;DR: Trait expression influenced pollination more so than robbing and pollen receipt was lower in plants that expressed higher levels of leaf gelsemine in two sites, implying that traits associated with pollination and herbivore resistance may not be independent. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
15. Life on Land (OpenAlex)
Source: Crossref
Added: February 18, 2024

2006 journal article

Florivory: the intersection of pollination and herbivory

Ecology Letters, 9(12), 1351–1365.

By: A. McCall & R. Irwin*

TL;DR: The approaches to studying florivory that are outlined may yield novel insights into floral and defence traits not illuminated by studies of pollination or herbivory alone. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: Crossref
Added: February 18, 2024

2006 journal article

Genetic implications of reduced survival of male red deer Cervus elaphus under harvest

WILDLIFE BIOLOGY, 12(4), 427–441.

By: J. Hard*, L. Mills* & J. Peek*

author keywords: Cervus elaphus; effective population size; elk; fitness; harvest; quantitative genetics
TL;DR: Analysis of harvest-mediated adaptive evolution in cervids using simple, multivariate evolutionary models indicates that harvest, if sufficiently high to reduce the breeding ratio of males to females to below about 15:100, can reduce effective population size to a level that threatens adaptive potential. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: Web Of Science
Added: August 6, 2018

2006 journal article

Local versus landscape determinants of butterfly movement behaviors

ECOGRAPHY, 29(4), 549–560.

By: D. Kuefler* & N. Haddad

TL;DR: Study of the movement behaviors of four species of bottomland butterflies in a natural setting showed that drainage slope did not influence movement behaviors but boundary type, stream proximity, and host plant abundance all influenced movement patterns. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science)
Source: Web Of Science
Added: August 6, 2018

2006 personal communication

Women in ecology - Authors reply

By: E. Damschen, K. Rosenfeld, M. Wyer, D. Murphy-Medley, T. Wentworth & N. Haddad

Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

2006 journal article

Corridors increase plant species richness at large scales

SCIENCE, 313(5791), 1284–1286.

MeSH headings : Biodiversity; Conservation of Natural Resources; Ecosystem; Environment; Pinus / growth & development; Plant Development; Seeds; Soil; South Carolina; Trees / growth & development
TL;DR: Using a large-scale replicated experiment, it is shown that habitat patches connected by corridors retain more native plant species than do isolated patches, that this difference increases over time, and that corridors do not promote invasion by exotic species. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
13. Climate Action (Web of Science)
15. Life on Land (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Source: Web Of Science
Added: August 6, 2018

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