Showing 1 - 20 results of 11,370 for search '(( significantly ((larger increases) OR (larger decrease)) ) OR ( significant small decrease ))', query time: 0.71s Refine Results
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    Current nest box designs may not be optimal for the larger forest dormice; pre-hibernation increase in body mass might lead to sampling bias in ecological data by Hesamaddin Farhadi (11747654)

    Published 2021
    “…Additionally, nest box occupancy decreased significantly from 20% before to 4.6% after the gnawing behavior.…”
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    DataSheet_1_The extremely small body size of Williamson’s mouse deer (Tragulus williamsoni) allows coexistence with sympatric larger ungulates through temporal avoidance.zip by Ru-Chuan He (17098336)

    Published 2023
    “…In this study, we assessed the competitive interactions of Williamson’s mouse deer (Tragulus williamsoni), an endangered species and one of the smallest ungulates in the world, with sympatric larger ungulates. We hypothesized that: 1) because of its extremely small body size, competition with the larger ungulates would be relatively weak, allowing spatial co-existence but still requiring temporal avoidance, and 2) the strength of avoidance would increases with decreasing differences in body size. …”
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    Structure stabilizes larger numbers of species, but increasing competitive asymmetry increases species loss. by Tristan Ursell (73348)

    Published 2021
    “…<b>(B)</b> Comparing identical conditions between two different system sizes (<i>L</i> = 100 and <i>L</i> = 200), the effects of disorder are relatively small in comparison to the effects of system size, with smaller system sizes (blue lines) showing a significant amplification of reduction in survival probability as compared to the larger system. …”
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    DataSheet_2_Climate factors drive plant distributions at higher taxonomic scales and larger spatial scales.docx by Erhan Huang (17772852)

    Published 2024
    “…Topographic factors had a relatively larger influence at higher taxonomic levels (i.e., family>genus>species), but with a relatively slow rise with the increase in spatial scale.…”
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    DataSheet_3_Climate factors drive plant distributions at higher taxonomic scales and larger spatial scales.docx by Erhan Huang (17772852)

    Published 2024
    “…Topographic factors had a relatively larger influence at higher taxonomic levels (i.e., family>genus>species), but with a relatively slow rise with the increase in spatial scale.…”