90 results on '"Lindo, Zoë"'
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2. Taxonomic Keys
3. Ecology of Oribatid Mites
4. Form and Function
5. Introduction
6. Impact of changing climate on bryophyte contributions to terrestrial water, carbon, and nitrogen cycles
7. Restructuring of soil food webs reduces carbon storage potential in boreal peatlands
8. Global fine-resolution data on springtail abundance and community structure
9. soilfoodwebs: An R package for analyzing and simulating nutrient fluxes through food webs
10. Back and better: Soil food-web researchers integrate empirical data and develop novel tools
11. Multiple dimensions of soil food-web research: History and prospects
12. soilfoodwebs: Soil Food Web Analysis
13. Stochastic processes in the structure and functioning of soil biodiversity
14. Large-scale experimental warming reduces soil faunal biodiversity through peatland drying
15. Ground warming releases inorganic mercury and increases net methylmercury production in two boreal peatland types
16. Mismatches in thermal performance between ectothermic predators and prey alter interaction strength and top-down control
17. Soilfoodwebs: An R Package for Analyzing and Simulating Nutrient Fluxes Through Food Webs
18. Oribatid Mites
19. Nematode contributions to the soil food web trophic structure of two contrasting boreal peatlands in Canada
20. Cannibalism has its limits in soil food webs
21. Predators minimize energy costs, rather than maximize energy gains under warming: Evidence from a microcosm feeding experiment
22. Response of soil biodiversity to global change
23. Global monitoring of soil animal communities using a common methodology
24. Responses of oribatid mites to warming in boreal peatlands depend on fen type
25. Local stability properties of complex, species‐rich soil food webs with functional block structure
26. Short-term intensive warming shifts predator communities (Parasitiformes: Mesostigmata) in boreal forest soils
27. Checklist of oribatid mites (Acari: Oribatida) from two contrasting boreal fens: an update on oribatid mites of Canadian peatlands
28. Feeding rate and efficiency in an apex soil predator exposed to short-term temperature changes
29. Ancient Coastal Rainforest Canopies in Western Canada: Issues in Biodiversity and Conservation
30. Armored Mites, Beetle Mites, or Moss Mites: The Fantastic World of Oribatida
31. Communities of Oribatida associated with litter input in western red cedar tree crowns: Are moss mats ‘magic carpets’ for oribatid mite dispersal?
32. Stoichiometric and structural uncertainty in soil food web models
33. Decomposition in Peatlands: Who Are the Players and What Affects Them?
34. Global change alters peatland carbon cycling through plant biomass allocation
35. Simulated climate warming increases plant community heterogeneity in two types of boreal peatlands in north–central Canada
36. Transoceanic dispersal of terrestrial species by debris rafting
37. Above- and belowground community linkages in boreal peatlands
38. A review of peer-review for Pedobiologia – Journal of Soil Ecology
39. Agricultural field margins provide food and nesting resources to bumble bees ( Bombus spp., Hymenoptera: Apidae) in Southwestern Ontario, Canada
40. Checklist of oribatid mites (Acari: Oribatida) of Canada and Alaska
41. A methodological framework to embrace soil biodiversity
42. Patterns and drivers of stream benthic macroinvertebrate beta diversity in an agricultural landscape
43. Vertical stratification of peatland microbial communities follows a gradient of functional types across hummock–hollow microtopographies
44. Acari of Canada
45. Diversity of Peloppiidae (Oribatida) in North America
46. Are leaf litter and microbes team players? Interpreting home-field advantage decomposition dynamics
47. Climate change favours specific fungal communities in boreal peatlands
48. The role of landscape connectivity in resistance, resilience, and recovery of multi‐trophic microarthropod communities
49. Drivers of decomposition and the detrital invertebrate community differ across a hummock-hollow microtopology in Boreal peatlands
50. Pure and mixed litters of Sphagnum and Carex exhibit a home-field advantage in Boreal peatlands
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