يعرض 101 - 120 نتائج من 8,543 نتيجة بحث عن '(( significant species decrease ) OR ( significant ((greatest decrease) OR (rivers decreased)) ))', وقت الاستعلام: 0.42s تنقيح النتائج
  1. 101

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

    منشور في 2021
    "…This relationship was weakly negative for foraging behavior and not statistically significant for taxonomic relatedness. Unlike most single-species groups, participants in mixed-species flocks appear to be able to separate on different axes of trait similarity. …"
  2. 102

    Household survey. حسب Gasim Omer Elkhalifa Abd-Elfarag (13171021)

    منشور في 2022
    الموضوعات:
  3. 103
  4. 104
  5. 105
  6. 106
  7. 107
  8. 108
  9. 109
  10. 110
  11. 111
  12. 112
  13. 113
  14. 114

    Coverage of plant species in each plot. حسب Xuemei Xiang (20756894)

    منشور في 2025
    الموضوعات:
  15. 115
  16. 116
  17. 117
  18. 118

    Data_Sheet_2_Phenotypic Clumping Decreases With Flock Richness in Mixed-Species Bird Flocks.csv حسب Priti Bangal (9979259)

    منشور في 2021
    "…This relationship was weakly negative for foraging behavior and not statistically significant for taxonomic relatedness. Unlike most single-species groups, participants in mixed-species flocks appear to be able to separate on different axes of trait similarity. …"
  19. 119

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

    منشور في 2021
    "…This relationship was weakly negative for foraging behavior and not statistically significant for taxonomic relatedness. Unlike most single-species groups, participants in mixed-species flocks appear to be able to separate on different axes of trait similarity. …"
  20. 120

    Data_Sheet_3_Phenotypic Clumping Decreases With Flock Richness in Mixed-Species Bird Flocks.csv حسب Priti Bangal (9979259)

    منشور في 2021
    "…This relationship was weakly negative for foraging behavior and not statistically significant for taxonomic relatedness. Unlike most single-species groups, participants in mixed-species flocks appear to be able to separate on different axes of trait similarity. …"