Showing 141 - 160 results of 17,887 for search '(((( a larger decrease ) OR ( i largest decrease ))) OR ( ((via large) OR (a large)) decrease ))', query time: 1.00s Refine Results
  1. 141

    <b>Nest mass in forest tits </b><b><i>Paridae</i></b><b> </b><b>increases with elevation and decreasing body mass, promoting reproductive success</b> by Clara Wild (19246606)

    Published 2025
    “…We found that nest mass increased by ~ 60% along the elevational gradient, but the effect of canopy openness on nest mass was not significant, while nest mass decreased along the ranked species from the smallest <i>Periparus ater</i> to the medium-sized <i>Cyanistes caeruleus</i> and the largest <i>Parus major</i>. …”
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    S1 data_Hazen Main and Blister 2017 absolute diatom counts from Contrasting the ecological effects of decreasing ice cover versus accelerated glacial melt on the High Arctic's largest lake by Neal Michelutti (688828)

    Published 2020
    “…Lake Hazen, the High Arctic's largest lake, has received an approximately 10-fold increase in glacial meltwater since its catchment glaciers shifted from net mass gain to net mass loss in 2007 CE, concurrent with recent warming. …”
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    Data of the article "The physiological cost of being hot: High thermal stress and disturbance decrease energy reserves in dragonflies in the wild" by Eduardo Ulises Castillo-Pérez (20869904)

    Published 2025
    “…We evaluated thermal stress in 16 insect dragonfly species during two sampling periods (2019 and 2022) in preserved and disturbed sites within a tropical dry forest in western Mexico. Also, we compared energetic condition (lipid and protein content) and thoracic mass for the seven most abundant species between both habitat types. …”
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    Large-scale cortical travelling waves predict localized future cortical signals - Fig 1 by David M. Alexander (7732289)

    Published 2019
    “…Since each phase estimate requires a window of the raw time-series (brackets), and this window is larger at low frequencies, this means the minimum temporal delay (milliseconds) between past and future phase estimates increases with decreasing frequency. …”
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