627 results on '"Beard, Karen"'
Search Results
152. Animal-Distribution Modeling in Gap Analysis: an Evolving Science
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
155. Functional traits explain amphibian distribution in the Brazilian Atlantic Forest
156. Alpha male Guyanan red howler monkey responses to nocturnal and diurnal loud calls
157. Cloud cover and delayed herbivory relative to timing of spring onset interact to dampen climate change impacts on net ecosystem exchange in a coastal Alaskan wetland
158. Uncovering the Natural History of the Bromeligenous Frog Crossodactylodes izecksohni (Leptodactylidae, Paratelmatobiinae)
159. FLOW UNDER THREAT: LEARNINGS FROM PRINCIPAL PREPARATION AND MARGINALIZATION INFORMING A NEW CONCEPTUAL MODEL
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
168. Phenological mismatch between season advancement and migration timing alters Arctic plant traits
169. Chronosequence and direct observation approaches reveal complementary community dynamics in a novel ecosystem
170. Migratory goose arrival time plays a larger role in influencing forage quality than advancing springs in an Arctic coastal wetland
171. Getting on Track: Aligning the Achievement Gap Conversation With Ethical Educational Practice
172. Are killer bees good for coffee? The contribution of a paper's title and other factors to its future citations
173. Predictors of Participation in Invasive Species Control Activities Depend on Prior Experience with the Species
174. Delayed herbivory by migratory geese increases summer‐long CO2 uptake in coastal western Alaska
175. Toward a theory of Engaged School Leadership
176. Special Issue Introduction
177. Regulating managed care in an integrated health system environment
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.
180. Chronosequence and direct observation approaches reveal complementary community dynamics in a novel ecosystem
181. Getting on track: aligning the achievement gap conversation with ethical educational practice
182. Competition and coexistence in plant communities: intraspecific competition is stronger than interspecific competition
183. Providing a Passport to the Future for Foster Youth: A Case for Educational Leadership and Policy
184. Charter School Authorization: A Gateway to Excellence and Equity
185. Phenological mismatch in coastal western Alaska may increase summer season greenhouse gas uptake
186. Body Size and Life History Traits in Native and Introduced Populations of Coqui Frogs
187. Direct effects of warming increase woody plant abundance in a subarctic wetland
188. Genetic basis of a color pattern polymorphism in the coqui frog Eleutherodactylus coqui
189. Breeding Guilds Determine Frog Response to Edge Effects in Brazil’s Atlantic Forest
190. Promises Kept or Opportunities Lost: A Wicked Problem in Educational Leadership
191. Protecting the Wild: Parks and Wilderness, the Foundation for Conservation. Edited by George Wuerthner, Eileen Crist, and Tom Butler. Washington (DC): Island Press. $24.95 (paper). xxvii + 362 p.; ill.; index. ISBN: 978-1-61091-548-9. 2015.
192. Fully-sampled phylogenies of squamates reveal evolutionary patterns in threat status
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
194. Different prey resources suggest little competition between non-native frogs and insectivorous birds despite isotopic niche overlap
195. DEVELOPMENT, FACTOR STRUCTURE AND RELIABILITY OF THE SHARED INSTRUCTIONAL LEADERSHIP SCALE (SILS)
196. Field work ethics in biological research
197. ENGAGED LEADERSHIP: AN INTERNATIONAL QUALITATIVE STUDY LINKING EFFECTIVE SCHOOL LEADERSHIP WITH FLOW THEORY 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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