Showing 41 - 60 results of 62,566 for search '(( i ((values decrease) OR (((largest decrease) OR (larger decrease)))) ) OR ( a large increased ))', query time: 1.35s Refine Results
  1. 41
  2. 42
  3. 43
  4. 44
  5. 45
  6. 46
  7. 47
  8. 48

    Table_1_Phenotypic Clumping Decreases With Flock Richness in Mixed-Species Bird Flocks.DOCX by Priti Bangal (9979259)

    Published 2021
    “…We examined the relationship between phenotypic clumping and flock richness using four variables—body size, foraging behavior, foraging height and taxonomic relatedness. Using a null model approach, we found that small flocks were more phenotypically clumped for body size than expected by chance; however, phenotypic clumping decreased as flocks increased in size and approached expected phenotypic variation in large flocks. …”
  9. 49
  10. 50
  11. 51
  12. 52
  13. 53
  14. 54
  15. 55
  16. 56
  17. 57
  18. 58

    TITAN thresholds and percentile estimates for benthic macroinvertebrate and diatom communities deemed to be sensitive decreasers or tolerant increasers. The thresholds represent the largest fsum <i>z</i> value in the main data analysis run (i.e., the median), whereas the 5<sup>th</sup> and 95<sup>th</sup> percentile change points are determined from 500 bootstrap replicate runs.... by Brent J. Bellinger (21156150)

    Published 2025
    “…<p>TITAN thresholds and percentile estimates for benthic macroinvertebrate and diatom communities deemed to be sensitive decreasers or tolerant increasers. The thresholds represent the largest fsum <i>z</i> value in the main data analysis run (i.e., the median), whereas the 5<sup>th</sup> and 95<sup>th</sup> percentile change points are determined from 500 bootstrap replicate runs. …”
  19. 59
  20. 60

    Data_Sheet_1_Phenotypic Clumping Decreases With Flock Richness in Mixed-Species Bird Flocks.csv by Priti Bangal (9979259)

    Published 2021
    “…We examined the relationship between phenotypic clumping and flock richness using four variables—body size, foraging behavior, foraging height and taxonomic relatedness. Using a null model approach, we found that small flocks were more phenotypically clumped for body size than expected by chance; however, phenotypic clumping decreased as flocks increased in size and approached expected phenotypic variation in large flocks. …”