ISSN 0030-1299
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
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Which ecologically important traits are most likely to evolve rapidly? pp. 1281-1283(3) Author: Thompson, John N.
Scale as a lurking factor: incorporating scale-dependence in experimental ecology pp. 1284-1291(8) Authors: Sandel, Brody; Smith, Adam B.
Limitation of population recovery: a stochastic approach to the case of the emperor penguin pp. 1292-1298(7) Authors: Jenouvrier, Stéphanie; Barbraud, Christophe; Weimerskirch, Henri; Caswell, Hal
What shapes intra-specific variation in home range size? A case study of female roe deer pp. 1299-1306(8) Authors: Saïd, Sonia; Gaillard, Jean-Michel; Widmer, Olivier; Débias, François; Bourgoin, Gilles; Delorme, Daniel; Roux, Céline
Salmon species, density and watershed size predict magnitude of marine enrichment in riparian food webs pp. 1307-1318(12) Authors: Hocking, Morgan D.; Reimchen, Thomas E.
Context-dependent effects of predator removal from experimental microcosm communities pp. 1319-1326(8) Authors: Worsfold, Nicholas T.; Warren, Philip H.; Petchey, Owen L.
Wider spectrum of fruit traits in invasive than native floras may increase the vulnerability of oceanic islands to plant invasions pp. 1327-1334(8) Authors: Kueffer, Christoph; Kronauer, Lilian; Edwards, Peter J.
Spatial heterogeneity increases the importance of species richness for an ecosystem process pp. 1335-1342(8) Authors: Griffin, John N.; Jenkins, Stuart R.; Gamfeldt, Lars; Jones, Douglas; Hawkins, Stephen J.; Thompson, Richard C.
The interplay between species' positive and negative interactions shapes the community biomass-species richness relationship pp. 1343-1348(6) Authors: Xiao, Sa; Michalet, Richard; Wang, Gang; Chen, Shu-Yan
Dispersal, edaphic fidelity and speciation in species-rich Western Australian shrublands: evaluating a neutral model of biodiversity pp. 1349-1362(14) Authors: Perry, G. L. W; Enright, N. J; Miller, B. P; Lamont, B. B; Etienne, R. S
Foraging behaviour of predators in heterogeneous landscapes: the role of perceptual ability and diet breadth pp. 1363-1372(10) Authors: Bianchi, F. J. J. A; Schellhorn, N. A; van der Werf, W.
Negative native-exotic diversity relationship in oak savannas explained by human influence and climate pp. 1373-1382(10) Authors: Lilley, Patrick L.; Vellend, Mark
Fire-mediated interactions between shrubs in a South American temperate savannah pp. 1383-1395(13) Authors: Biganzoli, Fernando; Wiegand, Thorsten; Batista, William B.
Hidden costs to an invasive intraguild predator from chemically defended native prey pp. 1396-1404(9) Authors: Sloggett, John J.; Haynes, Kenneth F.; Obrycki, John J.
How human disturbance of tropical rainforest can influence avian fruit removal pp. 1405-1415(11) Authors: Lefevre, Kara L.; Rodd, F. Helen
Geographic variation in sterilizing parasite species and the Red Queen pp. 1416-1420(5) Authors: King, Kayla C.; Lively, Curtis M.
Multiple predators induce risk reduction in coexisting vole species pp. 1421-1429(9) Authors: Hoset, Katrine S.; Koivisto, Elina; Huitu, Otso; Ylönen, Hannu; Korpimäki, Erkki
The functional consequences of diversity in plant-pollinator interactions pp. 1430-1440(11) Authors: Perfectti, Francisco; Gómez, José M.; Bosch, Jordi