sameAs
Extinction risk and conservation of the world's sharks and raysTen principles from evolutionary ecology essential for effective marine conservationEvolutionary transitions among egg-laying, live-bearing and maternal inputs in sharks and raysGrowth, productivity, and relative extinction risk of a data-sparse devil rayPotential consequences of climate change for primary production and fish production in large marine ecosystems.Ecosystem ecology: size-based constraints on the pyramids of life.Clarifying misconceptions of extinction risk assessment with the IUCN Red List.Conservation biology: strict marine protected areas prevent reef shark declines.Niches versus neutrality: uncovering the drivers of diversity in a species-rich community.The Gulf: a young sea in decline.Global marine primary production constrains fisheries catches.Diagnosing the dangerous demography of manta rays using life history theory.The impact of conservation on the status of the world's vertebrates.Transitional states in marine fisheries: adapting to predicted global change.Coral identity underpins architectural complexity on Caribbean reefs.Oceans. Avoiding empty ocean commitments at Rio+20.The conservation and management of tunas and their relatives: setting life history research prioritiesThermal-safety margins and the necessity of thermoregulatory behavior across latitude and elevationLife-history correlates of the evolution of live bearing in fishesGlobal population trajectories of tunas and their relatives.What is macroecology?Current and future sustainability of island coral reef fisheries.Sympathy for the devil: a conservation strategy for devil and manta rays.Black-swan events in animal populationsChallenges and Priorities in Shark and Ray Conservation.Rethinking Trade-Driven Extinction Risk in Marine and Terrestrial Megafauna.Ecology: Recovering the potential of coral reefs.Reliability of indicators of decline in abundance.Bright spots of sustainable shark fishing.Energy and the Scaling of Animal Space Use.Biodiversity: Sharks and rays in peril too.Reply to Youngflesh and Lynch: Migration and population growth rate in animal black-swan events.Global-scale predictions of community and ecosystem properties from simple ecological theory.Salmon subsidize an escape from a size spectrum.Flattening of Caribbean coral reefs: region-wide declines in architectural complexity.The false classification of extinction risk in noisy environments.Population declines of tuna and relatives depend on their speed of life.Linked sustainability challenges and trade-offs among fisheries, aquaculture and agriculture.The paradox of inverted biomass pyramids in kelp forest fish communities.Global analysis of thermal tolerance and latitude in ectotherms.
P50
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P50
description
Marine conservation biologist
@en
biologiste canadien
@fr
biologo canadese
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biologo kanadarra
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biòleg canadenc
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biólogo canadense
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biólogo canadiano
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biólogo canadiense
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biólogu canadianu
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Nicholas K. Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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type
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Nicholas K. Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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altLabel
Nicholas K. Dulvy
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Nicholas K. Dulvy
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Nicholas K. Dulvy
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Nicholas K. Dulvy
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prefLabel
Nicholas K. Dulvy
@nl
Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
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Nick Dulvy
@de
Nick Dulvy
@en
Nick Dulvy
@es
Nick Dulvy
@fr
Nick Dulvy
@ga
Nick Dulvy
@sl
Nick Dulvy
@sq
P106
P1153
6701844802
P1960
FTpjJ1QAAAAJ
P21
P27
P31
P373
Nick Dulvy (biologist)
P496
0000-0002-4295-9725