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Wiley InterScience | |||||||||||||||
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![]() An Official Journal of the British Ecological Society Current IssueVolume 47 Issue 1 (February 2010)EditorialPutting applied ecology into practice (p 1-4) Abstract
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ReviewsDistance software: design and analysis of distance sampling surveys for estimating population size (p 5-14) Abstract
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Defining and measuring ecological specialization (p 15-25) Abstract
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| Supporting information The introduction of coastal infrastructure as a driver of change in marine environments (p 26-35) Abstract
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Modelling and managementThe economic efficiency of a time–area closure to protect spawning bluefin tuna (p 36-46) Abstract
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| Supporting information Inferring spatial structure from time-series data: using multivariate state-space models to detect metapopulation structure of California sea lions in the Gulf of California, Mexico (p 47-56) Abstract
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A network approach for evaluating and communicating forest change models (p 57-66) Abstract
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| Supporting information Resource availability and the persistence of seed-eating bird populations in agricultural landscapes : a mechanistic modelling approach (p 67-75) Abstract
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| Supporting information Empirical comparison of density estimators for large carnivores (p 76-84) Abstract
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Favourable habitats for Coffea inter-specific hybridization in central New Caledonia: combined genetic and spatial analyses (p 85-95) Abstract
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| Supporting information Invasive speciesAlternative states models provide an effective framework for invasive species control and restoration of native communities (p 96-105) Abstract
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| Supporting information Modelling detection probabilities to evaluate management and control tools for an invasive species (p 106-113) Abstract
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Behavioural responses of invasive American mink Neovison vison to an eradication campaign, revealed by stable isotope analysis (p 114-120) Abstract
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| Supporting information Do non-native invasive fish support elevated lamprey populations? (p 121-129) Abstract
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Restoration and recoveryPatch size effects on avian foraging behaviour: implications for tropical forest restoration design (p 130-138) Abstract
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Editor's ChoiceSpontaneous succession in limestone quarries as an effective restoration tool for endangered arthropods and plants (p 139-147) Abstract
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| Supporting information Recovery of anuran community diversity following habitat replacement (p 148-156) Abstract
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| Supporting information Barriers to tree seedling emergence on human-induced grasslands in Sri Lanka (p 157-165) Abstract
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| Supporting information Human-wildlife interactionPredictability of repeated carnivore attacks on livestock favours reactive use of mitigation measures (p 166-171) Abstract
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Comparing opportunistic and systematic sampling methods for non-invasive genetic monitoring of a small translocated brown bear population (p 172-181) Abstract
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| Supporting information Functional responses in habitat selection by tropical birds moving through fragmented forest (p 182-190) Abstract
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Impacts of shellfisheries and nutrient inputs on waterbird communities in the Wash, England (p 191-199) Abstract
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| Supporting information Plant-insect interactionQuantifying aphid predation: the mealy plum aphid Hyalopterus pruni in California as a case study (p 200-208) Abstract
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Oilseed rape crops distort plant–pollinator interactions (p 209-214) Abstract
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Long-term monitoringLong-term changes in the flora of the cereal ecosystem on the Sussex Downs, England, focusing on the years 1968–2005 (p 215-226) Abstract
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| Supporting information Ethics and ecologyAssessing ethical trade-offs in ecological field studies (p 227-234) Abstract
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