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Showing 81 - 100 results of 9,526 for search '(( six ((mean decrease) OR (teer decrease)) ) OR ( i ((largest decrease) OR (larger decrease)) ))', query time: 0.53s Refine Results
  1. 81

    Global parameters and variables for the model. by Alexandra M. Campbell (3284094)

    Published 2025
    “…Some rare species may persist through rapid evolution to tolerate or escape new threats, but representing the underlying ecological and evolutionary processes at the appropriate scale is analytically and computationally challenging. <i>Tillandsia utriculata</i> has been classified as endangered in Florida where its population has decreased significantly due to predation by the invasive Mexican weevil <i>Metamasius callizona</i>. …”
  2. 82

    Variables of patch located at coordinates . by Alexandra M. Campbell (3284094)

    Published 2025
    “…Some rare species may persist through rapid evolution to tolerate or escape new threats, but representing the underlying ecological and evolutionary processes at the appropriate scale is analytically and computationally challenging. <i>Tillandsia utriculata</i> has been classified as endangered in Florida where its population has decreased significantly due to predation by the invasive Mexican weevil <i>Metamasius callizona</i>. …”
  3. 83

    MRSP Data collected in March 2018. by Alexandra M. Campbell (3284094)

    Published 2025
    “…Some rare species may persist through rapid evolution to tolerate or escape new threats, but representing the underlying ecological and evolutionary processes at the appropriate scale is analytically and computationally challenging. <i>Tillandsia utriculata</i> has been classified as endangered in Florida where its population has decreased significantly due to predation by the invasive Mexican weevil <i>Metamasius callizona</i>. …”
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    <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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    Reduction of false positives at larger family sizes. by Sabine Hellwig (122242)

    Published 2018
    “…In (C), the mean error rate across the entire capture panel (128 genes, 128 kb) decreased with increasingly larger family sizes. Total consensus aligned counts for non-reference alleles with AF < 0.1% (D), 0.1% ≥ AF ≤ 1.0% (E), and 1.0% > AF ≤ 2.0% (F) are shown (black circles). …”
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