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Number of items at this level: 8.
A
- Alderman, J. (2005) Conservation by simulation: an individual-based spatially explicit model to simulate population dynamics in fragmented habitat. Doctoral thesis. University of Leicester.
C
- 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.
D
- 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.
F
- 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 (Unpublished)
H
- 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.
M
- 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.
- McCollin, D. (2014) Abundance estimates for landbirds and seabirds extracted and compiled from annual reports of the Skokholm bird observatory. Pangaea.
O
- 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 (Unpublished)