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653 results on '"Barro Colorado Island"'

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251. ARE LIANAS INCREASING IN IMPORTANCE IN TROPICAL FORESTS? A 17-YEAR RECORD FROM PANAMA.

252. Seasonal and annual variation in the abundance of Ephuta (Hymenoptera: Mutillidae) in Panama

253. GAP-DEPENDENT RECRUITMENT, REALIZED VITAL RATES, AND SIZE DISTRIBUTIONS OF TROPICAL TREES.

254. Interactions of gap size and herbivory on establishment, growth and survival of three species of neotropical pioneer trees.

255. Mechanics and chemistry of rain forest leaves: canopy and understorey compared*.

256. Convergence in defense syndromes of young leaves in tropical rainforests

257. Photosynthetic Induction and Leaf Carbon Gain in the Tropical Understorey Epiphyte, Aspasia principissa.

258. Substrate preferences of epiphytic bromeliads: an experimental approach

259. Diversity and structure of the arthropod fauna within three canopy epiphyte species in central Panama.

260. Effects of habitat fragmentation on pollination: pollinators, pollinia viability and reproductive success.

261. Local neighborhood effects on long-term survival of individual trees in a neotropical forest.

262. Ecophysiological consequences of differences in plant size: abscisic acid relationships in the epiphytic orchid Dimerandra emarginata.

263. Reproductive ecology and pollen representation among neotropical trees.

264. Effects of seedling size, El Niño drought, seedling density, and distance to nearest conspecific adult on 6-year survival of Ocotea whitei seedlings in Panamá.

265. Fur rubbing behavior in free-ranging black-handed spider monkeys (Ateles geoffroyi ) in Panama.

266. Stomatal behavior and photosynthetic performance under dynamic light regimes in a seasonally dry tropical rain forest.

267. Stomatal versus biochemical limitations to dynamic photosynthetic performance in four tropical rainforest shrub species.

269. A highly resolved food web for insect seed predators in a species‐rich tropical forest

270. Patterns of Herbivory in Neotropical Forest Katydids as Revealed by DNA Barcoding of Digestive Tract Contents.

271. Something to howl about: to earn her spurs as a tropical biologist, the author decided to study a parasite that even her colleagues wanted to avoid

272. Turgor loss point predicts survival responses to experimental and natural drought in tropical tree seedlings.

274. Host-specificity of folivorous insects in a moist tropical forest.

275. A survey of root pressures in vines of a tropical lowland forest.

276. Effects of light availability and rainfall on leaf production in a moist tropical forest in central Panama.

277. Soil seed bank community dynamics in seasonally moist lowland tropical forest, Panama.

279. The canopy gap regime in a secondary Neotropical forest in Panama.

280. Evaluación del Flujo de CO2 en suelo en Isla Barro Colorado

281. Non-zero-sum neutrality test for the tropical rain forest community using long-term between-census data.

282. Dorsal landmark navigation in a Neotropical nocturnal bee.

283. Seed tannin composition of tropical plants.

284. Local canopy disturbance as an explanation for long-term increases in liana abundance.

285. Carrion fly-derived DNA metabarcoding is an effective tool for mammal surveys: evidence from a known tropical mammal community

286. Characterization of 14 microsatellite DNA markers for the tropical forest tree Virola surinamensis (Rol.) Warb. (Myristicaceae).

287. A quantification of predation rates, indirect positive effects on plants, and foraging variation of the giant tropical ant, Paraponera clavata

288. Bird Occupancy of a Neotropical Forest Fragment Is Mostly Stable over 17 Years but Influenced by Forest Age.

289. Deriving Tree Size Distributions of Tropical Forests from Lidar.

290. The Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute: Ecological and applied research.

291. Enemy-free space and the distribution of ants, springtails and termites in the soil of one tropical rainforest.

300. Data from: Carrion fly-derived DNA metabarcoding is an effective tool for mammal surveys: evidence from a known tropical mammal community

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