Northampton Electronic Collection of Theses and Research

Items where Subject is "QH540 Ecology"

Group by: Creators | Item Type | Date | No Grouping
Jump to: 2017 | 2016 | 2014 | 2013 | 2009 | 2005
Number of items at this level: 8.

2017

  1. McCollin, D. (2017) Turnover dynamics of breeding land birds on islands: is island biogeographic theory ‘true but trivial’ over decadal time-scales? Diversity. 9(1), p. 3. 1424-2818.

2016

  1. Howard-Williams, E., Littlemore, J., McCormick, W. D. and McCollin, D. (2016) The effect of eroded ecological networks on the movement of harvest mice (Micromys minutus). Seminar Presentation presented to: 5th Postgraduate Research Symposium, Moulton College, Northampton, 15 December 2016.

2014

  1. McCollin, D. (2014) Abundance estimates for landbirds and seabirds extracted and compiled from annual reports of the Skokholm bird observatory. Pangaea.

2013

  1. Dalsgaard, B., Trøjelsgaard, K., Martín González, A. M., Nogués-Bravo, D., Ollerton, J., Petanidou, T., Sandel, B., Schleuning, M., Wang, Z., Rahbek, C., Sutherland, W. J., Svenning, J.-C. and Olesen, J. M. (2013) Historical climate-change influences modularity and nestedness of pollination networks. Ecography. 36(12), pp. 1331-1340. 1600-0587.

2009

  1. Foster, I. D. L. (2009) Extending the evidence base on the ecological impacts of fine sediment and developing a framework for targeting mitigation of agricultural sediment losses. (Unpublished)
  2. Ollerton, J., Masinde, S., Meve, U., Picker, M. and Whittington, A. (2009) Why do species interact? A test of four hypotheses using Ceropegia (Apocynaceae) as a case study. Paper presented to: National Museum of Nature and Science International Symposium 2009 - Origin of Biodiversity by Biological Interactions, Tokyo, Japan, 21 - 23 November 2009. (Unpublished)

2005

  1. Alderman, J. (2005) Conservation by simulation: an individual-based spatially explicit model to simulate population dynamics in fragmented habitat. Doctoral thesis. University of Leicester.
  2. Clarkson, P. A. (2005) The influence of aspect and forest edge effects on the ecology of the wood ant, Formica rufa L. (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Doctoral thesis. University of Leicester.
This list was generated from NECTAR on Wed Sep 3 16:34:44 2025 BST.