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153. Principals' Sensemaking of Leading Under Accountability And Innovation Policies.

154. Increased Soil Frost Versus Summer Drought as Drivers of Plant Biomass Responses To Reduced Precipitation: Results from A Globally-Coordinated Field Experiment

158. Uncovering the Natural History of the Bromeligenous Frog Crossodactylodes izecksohni (Leptodactylidae, Paratelmatobiinae)

160. Figure 1 from: Ferreira RB, Mônico AT, da Silva ET, Lirio FCF, Zocca C, Mageski MM, Tonini JFR, Beard KH, Duca C, Silva-Soares T (2019) Amphibians of Santa Teresa, Brazil: the hotspot further evaluated. ZooKeys 857: 139-162. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.857.30302

161. Figure 4 from: Ferreira RB, Mônico AT, da Silva ET, Lirio FCF, Zocca C, Mageski MM, Tonini JFR, Beard KH, Duca C, Silva-Soares T (2019) Amphibians of Santa Teresa, Brazil: the hotspot further evaluated. ZooKeys 857: 139-162. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.857.30302

162. Figure 5 from: Ferreira RB, Mônico AT, da Silva ET, Lirio FCF, Zocca C, Mageski MM, Tonini JFR, Beard KH, Duca C, Silva-Soares T (2019) Amphibians of Santa Teresa, Brazil: the hotspot further evaluated. ZooKeys 857: 139-162. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.857.30302

163. Figure 7 from: Ferreira RB, Mônico AT, da Silva ET, Lirio FCF, Zocca C, Mageski MM, Tonini JFR, Beard KH, Duca C, Silva-Soares T (2019) Amphibians of Santa Teresa, Brazil: the hotspot further evaluated. ZooKeys 857: 139-162. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.857.30302

164. Figure 2 from: Ferreira RB, Mônico AT, da Silva ET, Lirio FCF, Zocca C, Mageski MM, Tonini JFR, Beard KH, Duca C, Silva-Soares T (2019) Amphibians of Santa Teresa, Brazil: the hotspot further evaluated. ZooKeys 857: 139-162. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.857.30302

165. Amphibians of Santa Teresa, Brazil: the hotspot further evaluated

166. Figure 3 from: Ferreira RB, Mônico AT, da Silva ET, Lirio FCF, Zocca C, Mageski MM, Tonini JFR, Beard KH, Duca C, Silva-Soares T (2019) Amphibians of Santa Teresa, Brazil: the hotspot further evaluated. ZooKeys 857: 139-162. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.857.30302

167. Figure 6 from: Ferreira RB, Mônico AT, da Silva ET, Lirio FCF, Zocca C, Mageski MM, Tonini JFR, Beard KH, Duca C, Silva-Soares T (2019) Amphibians of Santa Teresa, Brazil: the hotspot further evaluated. ZooKeys 857: 139-162. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.857.30302

178. Lizard and frog removal increases spider abundance but does not cascade to increase herbivory.

179. Functional traits explain amphibian distribution in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest.

189. Breeding Guilds Determine Frog Response to Edge Effects in Brazil’s Atlantic Forest

193. Effects of roads and land use on frog distributions across spatial scales and regions in the E astern and C entral U nited S tates

196. Field work ethics in biological research

198. Invasive coqui frogs are associated with differences in mongoose and rat abundances and diets in Hawaii.

199. Back to the future: conserving functional and phylogenetic diversity in amphibian-climate refuges.

200. Providing a Passport to the Future for Foster Youth: A Case for Educational Leadership and Policy.

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