Assessing the effects of large mobile predators on ecosystem connectivity.
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Night shift: expansion of temporal niche use following reductions in predator densityQuantifying shark distribution patterns and species-habitat associations: implications of marine park zoningEvidence of Partial Migration in a Large Coastal Predator: Opportunistic Foraging and Reproduction as Key Drivers?Marine reserves can mitigate and promote adaptation to climate change.Drivers of abundance and spatial distribution of reef-associated sharks in an isolated atoll reef system.Resetting predator baselines in coral reef ecosystems.Crossing latitudes--long-distance tracking of an apex predator.Predatory fish depletion and recovery potential on Caribbean reefsMarine defaunation: animal loss in the global ocean.Variable δ(15)N diet-tissue discrimination factors among sharks: implications for trophic position, diet and food web modelsPositive and negative effects of a threatened parrotfish on reef ecosystems.Reef sharks: recent advances in ecological understanding to inform conservation.Horizontal and vertical movements of Caribbean reef sharks (Carcharhinus perezi): conservation implications of limited migration in a marine sanctuary.Discontinuities, cross-scale patterns, and the organization of ecosystems.Topographic determinants of mobile vertebrate predator hotspots: current knowledge and future directions.Body size drives allochthony in food webs of tropical rivers.Geographic extent and variation of a coral reef trophic cascade.Regional movement patterns of a small-bodied shark revealed by stable-isotope analysis.Limited trophic partitioning among sympatric delphinids off a tropical oceanic atoll.The roles of productivity and ecosystem size in determining food chain length in tropical terrestrial ecosystems.Size, sex and individual-level behaviour drive intrapopulation variation in cross-ecosystem foraging of a top-predator.Cascading predator effects in a Fijian coral reef ecosystem.Extinction risk is most acute for the world's largest and smallest vertebrates.Environmental drivers of diurnal visits by transient predatory fishes to Caribbean patch reefs.Fishing degrades size structure of coral reef fish communities.Contrasting movements and connectivity of reef-associated sharks using acoustic telemetry: implications for management.Blacktip reef sharks, Carcharhinus melanopterus, have high genetic structure and varying demographic histories in their Indo-Pacific range.On the prevalence and dynamics of inverted trophic pyramids and otherwise top-heavy communities.Mobile marine predators: an understudied source of nutrients to coral reefs in an unfished atoll.Top-down pulses reduce prey population sizes and persistence.Increasing rate of species discovery in sharks coincides with sharp population declines: implications for biodiversitySpatial separation without territoriality in shark communitiesLow abundance of sharks and rays in baited remote underwater video surveys in the Arabian GulfReliance of mobile species on sensitive habitats: a case study of manta rays (Manta alfredi) and lagoonsDirect and indirect effects of nursery habitats on coral-reef fish assemblages, grazing pressure and benthic dynamicsFish spawning aggregations: where well-placed management actions can yield big benefits for fisheries and conservationRegime shifts shorten food chains for mesopredators with potential sublethal effects
P2860
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P2860
Assessing the effects of large mobile predators on ecosystem connectivity.
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2012 nî lūn-bûn
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2012年の論文
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2012年論文
@yue
2012年論文
@zh-hant
2012年論文
@zh-hk
2012年論文
@zh-mo
2012年論文
@zh-tw
2012年论文
@wuu
2012年论文
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2012年论文
@zh-cn
name
Assessing the effects of large mobile predators on ecosystem connectivity.
@en
Assessing the effects of large mobile predators on ecosystem connectivity.
@nl
type
label
Assessing the effects of large mobile predators on ecosystem connectivity.
@en
Assessing the effects of large mobile predators on ecosystem connectivity.
@nl
prefLabel
Assessing the effects of large mobile predators on ecosystem connectivity.
@en
Assessing the effects of large mobile predators on ecosystem connectivity.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P356
P1476
Assessing the effects of large mobile predators on ecosystem connectivity.
@en
P2093
Brice X Semmens
Douglas J McCauley
Fiorenza Micheli
Hillary S Young
James A Estes
Robert B Dunbar
P2860
P304
P356
10.1890/11-1653.1
P577
2012-09-01T00:00:00Z