13 results on '"Hood, Amelia S.C."'
Search Results
2. ‘Small Data’ for big insights in ecology
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Todman, Lindsay C., Bush, Alex, and Hood, Amelia S.C.
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- 2023
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3. A solution scan of societal options to reduce transmission and spread of respiratory viruses: SARS-CoV-2 as a case study
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Sutherland, William J., Taylor, Nigel G., Aldridge, David C., Martin, Philip, Rhodes, Catherine, Shackelford, Gorm, Beard, Simon, Belfield, Haydn, Bladon, Andrew J., Brick, Cameron, Christie, Alec P., Dobson, Andrew P., Downey, Harriet, Hood, Amelia S.C., Hua, Fangyuan, Hughes, Alice C., Jarvis, Rebecca M., MacFarlane, Douglas, Morgan, William H., Mupepele, Anne-Christine, Marciniak, Stefan J., Nelson, Cassidy, Ó hÉigeartaigh, Seán, Rios Rojas, Clarissa, Sainsbury, Katherine A., Smith, Rebecca K., Sundaram, Lalitha S., Thornton, Ann, Watkins, John, White, Thomas B., Willott, Kate, and Petrovan, Silviu O.
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- 2021
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4. Removing understory vegetation in oil palm agroforestry reduces ground-foraging ant abundance but not species richness
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Hood, Amelia S.C., Advento, Andreas D., Stone, Jake, Fayle, Tom M., Fairnie, Alice L.M., Waters, Helen S., Foster, William A., Snaddon, Jake L., Ps, Sudharto, Caliman, Jean-Pierre, Naim, Mohammad, and Turner, Edgar C.
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- 2020
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5. Seminatural areas act as reservoirs of genetic diversity for crop pollinators and natural enemies across Europe
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Ortego, Joaquín, Albrecht, Matthias, Báldi, András, Bilde, Trine, Craig, Sean Birk Bek, Herrera, José M., Hood, Amelia S.C., Kleijn, David, Maurer, Corina, Molina, Francisco P., Öckinger, Erik, Potts, Simon G., Settepani, Virginia, Thomsen, Philip Francis, Trillo, Marina, Vajna, Flóra, Velado-Alonso, Elena, Bartomeus, Ignasi, Ortego, Joaquín, Albrecht, Matthias, Báldi, András, Bilde, Trine, Craig, Sean Birk Bek, Herrera, José M., Hood, Amelia S.C., Kleijn, David, Maurer, Corina, Molina, Francisco P., Öckinger, Erik, Potts, Simon G., Settepani, Virginia, Thomsen, Philip Francis, Trillo, Marina, Vajna, Flóra, Velado-Alonso, Elena, and Bartomeus, Ignasi
- Abstract
Despite increasing recognition of the importance of the multiple dimensions of biodiversity, including functional or genetic diversity as well as species diversity, most conservation studies on ecosystem service-providing insects focus on simple diversity measures such as species richness and abundance. In contrast, relatively little is known about the genetic diversity and resilience of pollinators or natural enemies of crop pests to population fragmentation and local extinction. The genetic diversity and demographic dynamics of remnant populations of beneficial insects in agricultural areas can be a useful indicator proving additional insights into their conservation status, but this is rarely evaluated. Although gene flow between agricultural and seminatural areas is key to maintaining genetic diversity, its extent and directionality remain largely unexplored. Here, we apply a pan-European sampling protocol to quantify genetic diversity and structure and assess gene flow between agricultural and nearby seminatural landscapes in populations of two key ecosystem service-providing insect species, the lady beetle Coccinella septempunctata, an important predator of aphids and other crop pests, and the bee pollinator Andrena flavipes. We show that A. flavipes populations are genetically structured at the European level, whereas populations of C. septempunctata experience widespread gene flow across the continent and lack any defined genetic structure. In both species, we found that there is high genetic connectivity between populations established in croplands and nearby seminatural areas and, as a consequence, they harbor similar levels of genetic diversity. Interestingly, demographic models for some regions support asymmetric gene flow from seminatural areas to nearby agricultural landscapes. Collectively, our study demonstrates how seminatural areas can serve as genetic reservoirs of both pollinators and natural enemies for nearby agricultural landscapes, acting as
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- 2024
6. Using a perception matrix to elicit farmers‘ perceptions towards stakeholders in the context of biodiversity-friendly farming
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Scherfranz, Verena, Moon, Katie, Kantelhardt, Jochen, Adler, Anneli, Barreiro, Sílvia, Bodea, Flaviu Valentin, Bretagnolle, Vincent, Brönnimann, Viviane, de Vries, Jan Peter Reinier, Dos Santos, Alice, Ganz, Maura, Herrera, José M., Hood, Amelia S.C., Leisch, Friedrich, Mauchline, Alice L., Melts, Indrek, Popa, Razvan, Rivera Girón, Vanesa María, Ruck, Andy, Vajna, Flóra, Velado-Alonso, Elena, Schaller, Lena, Scherfranz, Verena, Moon, Katie, Kantelhardt, Jochen, Adler, Anneli, Barreiro, Sílvia, Bodea, Flaviu Valentin, Bretagnolle, Vincent, Brönnimann, Viviane, de Vries, Jan Peter Reinier, Dos Santos, Alice, Ganz, Maura, Herrera, José M., Hood, Amelia S.C., Leisch, Friedrich, Mauchline, Alice L., Melts, Indrek, Popa, Razvan, Rivera Girón, Vanesa María, Ruck, Andy, Vajna, Flóra, Velado-Alonso, Elena, and Schaller, Lena
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Farmers' pro-environmental action is substantially influenced by various stakeholders from their business and social environment. Recent studies recommend actively involving influential stakeholders in agri-environmental initiatives, information or media campaigns. While it has been argued that farmers' perceptions towards these stakeholders can help inform effective involvement, comprehensive assessments of these perceptions remain scarce, particularly in the context of biodiversity-friendly farming. To understand and compare farmers’ perceptions of these stakeholder quantitatively, we developed and applied a perception matrix. In an exploratory survey with 49 farmers across ten European countries, farmers rated twelve groups of stakeholders (e.g. government bodies, farm advisors and input suppliers) against eight perception constructs (e.g. trustworthiness, interest in protecting biodiversity). We found that perceptions differed significantly both between groups of stakeholders and between constructs. Whereas several stakeholders were, on average, perceived positively regarding their general characteristics, such as trustworthiness, reliability, understanding and support for farming, perceptions regarding their biodiversity-related behavior were significantly more negative. Our findings indicate potential to improve policy development and implementation of agri-environmental initiatives through the involvement of multiple, non-governmental, agricultural and non-agricultural stakeholders in biodiversity-friendly farming initiatives across the entire agri-food value chain. Such multi-stakeholder initiatives could help to not only reinforce biodiversity conservation action among the farming community, but across society as a whole as emphasized by the Convention on Biological Diversity. Further research is needed to confirm the observed trends on a larger, representative sample, for which the presented perception matrix is well suited.
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- 2024
7. Grand challenges in entomology: Priorities for action in the coming decades
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Luke, Sarah H., Roy, Helen E., Thomas, Chris D., Tilley, Luke A.N., Ward, Simon, Watt, Allan, Carnaghi, Manuela, Jaworski, Coline C., Tercel, Maximillian P.T.G., Woodrow, Charlie, Aown, Susmita, Banfield-Zanin, Jennifer A., Barnsley, Sarah L., Berger, Iris, Brown, Mark J.F., Bull, James C., Campbell, Heather, Carter, Ruth A.B., Charalambous, Magda, Cole, Lorna J., Ebejer, Martin J., Farrow, Rachel A., Fartyal, Rajendra S., Grace, Miriam, Highet, Fiona, Hill, Jane K., Hood, Amelia S.C., Kent, Eleanor S., Krell, Frank Thorsten, Leather, Simon R., Leybourne, Daniel J., Littlewood, Nick A., Lyons, Ashley, Matthews, Graham, Mc Namara, Louise, Menéndez, Rosa, Merrett, Peter, Mohammed, Sajidha, Murchie, Archie K., Noble, Michael, Paiva, Maria Rosa, Pannell, Michael J., Phon, Chooi Khim, Port, Gordon, Powell, Charlotte, Rosell, Stewart, Sconce, Francisca, Shortall, Chris R., Slade, Eleanor M., Sutherland, Jamie P., Dicks, Lynn, Luke, Sarah H., Roy, Helen E., Thomas, Chris D., Tilley, Luke A.N., Ward, Simon, Watt, Allan, Carnaghi, Manuela, Jaworski, Coline C., Tercel, Maximillian P.T.G., Woodrow, Charlie, Aown, Susmita, Banfield-Zanin, Jennifer A., Barnsley, Sarah L., Berger, Iris, Brown, Mark J.F., Bull, James C., Campbell, Heather, Carter, Ruth A.B., Charalambous, Magda, Cole, Lorna J., Ebejer, Martin J., Farrow, Rachel A., Fartyal, Rajendra S., Grace, Miriam, Highet, Fiona, Hill, Jane K., Hood, Amelia S.C., Kent, Eleanor S., Krell, Frank Thorsten, Leather, Simon R., Leybourne, Daniel J., Littlewood, Nick A., Lyons, Ashley, Matthews, Graham, Mc Namara, Louise, Menéndez, Rosa, Merrett, Peter, Mohammed, Sajidha, Murchie, Archie K., Noble, Michael, Paiva, Maria Rosa, Pannell, Michael J., Phon, Chooi Khim, Port, Gordon, Powell, Charlotte, Rosell, Stewart, Sconce, Francisca, Shortall, Chris R., Slade, Eleanor M., Sutherland, Jamie P., and Dicks, Lynn
- Abstract
Entomology is key to understanding terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems at a time of unprecedented anthropogenic environmental change and offers substantial untapped potential to benefit humanity in a variety of ways, from improving agricultural practices to managing vector-borne diseases and inspiring technological advances. We identified high priority challenges for entomology using an inclusive, open, and democratic four-stage prioritisation approach, conducted among the membership and affiliates (hereafter ‘members’) of the UK-based Royal Entomological Society (RES). A list of 710 challenges was gathered from 189 RES members. Thematic analysis was used to group suggestions, followed by an online vote to determine initial priorities, which were subsequently ranked during an online workshop involving 37 participants. The outcome was a set of 61 priority challenges within four groupings of related themes: (i) ‘Fundamental Research’ (themes: Taxonomy, ‘Blue Skies’ [defined as research ideas without immediate practical application], Methods and Techniques); (ii) ‘Anthropogenic Impacts and Conservation’ (themes: Anthropogenic Impacts, Conservation Options); (iii) ‘Uses, Ecosystem Services and Disservices’ (themes: Ecosystem Benefits, Technology and Resources [use of insects as a resource, or as inspiration], Pests); (iv) ‘Collaboration, Engagement and Training’ (themes: Knowledge Access, Training and Collaboration, Societal Engagement). Priority challenges encompass research questions, funding objectives, new technologies, and priorities for outreach and engagement. Examples include training taxonomists, establishing a global network of insect monitoring sites, understanding the extent of insect declines, exploring roles of cultivated insects in food supply chains, and connecting professional with amateur entomologists. Responses to different challenges could be led by amateur and professional entomologists, at all career stages. Overall, the challenges provide a
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- 2023
8. RADseq for Coccinella septempunctata (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) and Andrena flavipes (Hymenoptera: Andrenidae)
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Ortego, Joaquín, Albrecht, Matthias, Báldi, András, Bilde, Trine, Craig, Sean Birk Bek, Herrera, José M., Hood, Amelia S.C., Kleijn, David, Maurer, Corina, Molina, Francisco P., Öckinger, Erik, Potts, Simon G., Settepani, Virginia, Thomsen, Philip Francis, Trillo, Marina, Vajna, Flóra, Velado-Alonso, Elena, Bartomeus, Ignasi, Ortego, Joaquín, Albrecht, Matthias, Báldi, András, Bilde, Trine, Craig, Sean Birk Bek, Herrera, José M., Hood, Amelia S.C., Kleijn, David, Maurer, Corina, Molina, Francisco P., Öckinger, Erik, Potts, Simon G., Settepani, Virginia, Thomsen, Philip Francis, Trillo, Marina, Vajna, Flóra, Velado-Alonso, Elena, and Bartomeus, Ignasi
- Abstract
The goal of this project is to use next generation sequencing (NGS) data to study gene flow between populations established in agricultural and semi-natural landscapes of two key ecosystem service-providing insects, the pest predator Coccinella septempunctata (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) and the pollinator Andrena flavipes (Hymenoptera: Andrenidae).
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- 2023
9. Managing oil palm plantations more sustainably: large-scale experiments within the Biodiversity and Ecosystem Function in Tropical Agriculture (BEFTA) programme
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Luke, Sarah H., Advento, Andreas Dwi, Aryawan, Anak Agung Ketut, Adhy, Dwi Nugroho, Ashton-Butt, Adham, Barclay, Holly, Dewi, Jassica Prajna, Drewer, Julia, Dumbrell, Alex J., Edi, Eycott, Amy E., Harianja, Martina F., Hinsch, Julie K., Hood, Amelia S.C., Kurniawan, Candra, Kurz, David J., Mann, Darren J., Matthews Nicholass, Kirsty J., Naim, Mohammad, Pashkevich, Michael D., Prescott, Graham W., Ps, Sudharto, Pujianto, Purnomo, Dedi, Purwoko, Rizky Rajabillah, Putra, Syafrisar, Rambe, T. Dzulfikar S., Soeprapto, Spear, Dakota M., Suhardi, Tan, David J.X., Tao, Hsiao-Hang, Tarigan, Ribka Sionita, Wahyuningsih, Resti, Waters, Helen S., Widodo, Rudi Harto, Whendy, Woodham, Christopher R., Caliman, Jean-Pierre, Slade, Eleanor M., Snaddon, Jake L., Foster, William A., Turner, Edgar C., Luke, Sarah H., Advento, Andreas Dwi, Aryawan, Anak Agung Ketut, Adhy, Dwi Nugroho, Ashton-Butt, Adham, Barclay, Holly, Dewi, Jassica Prajna, Drewer, Julia, Dumbrell, Alex J., Edi, Eycott, Amy E., Harianja, Martina F., Hinsch, Julie K., Hood, Amelia S.C., Kurniawan, Candra, Kurz, David J., Mann, Darren J., Matthews Nicholass, Kirsty J., Naim, Mohammad, Pashkevich, Michael D., Prescott, Graham W., Ps, Sudharto, Pujianto, Purnomo, Dedi, Purwoko, Rizky Rajabillah, Putra, Syafrisar, Rambe, T. Dzulfikar S., Soeprapto, Spear, Dakota M., Suhardi, Tan, David J.X., Tao, Hsiao-Hang, Tarigan, Ribka Sionita, Wahyuningsih, Resti, Waters, Helen S., Widodo, Rudi Harto, Whendy, Woodham, Christopher R., Caliman, Jean-Pierre, Slade, Eleanor M., Snaddon, Jake L., Foster, William A., and Turner, Edgar C.
- Abstract
Conversion of tropical forest to agriculture results in reduced habitat heterogeneity, and associated declines in biodiversity and ecosystem functions. Management strategies to increase biodiversity in agricultural landscapes have therefore often focused on increasing habitat complexity; however, the large-scale, long-term ecological experiments that are needed to test the effects of these strategies are rare in tropical systems. Oil palm (Elaeis guineensis Jacq.)—one of the most widespread and important tropical crops—offers substantial potential for developing wildlife-friendly management strategies because of its long rotation cycles and tree-like structure. Although there is awareness of the need to increase sustainability, practical options for how best to manage oil palm plantations, for benefits to both the environment and crop productivity, have received little research attention. In this paper we introduce the Biodiversity and Ecosystem Function in Tropical Agriculture (BEFTA) Programme: a long-term research collaboration between academia and industry in Sumatra, Indonesia. The BEFTA Programme aims to better understand the oil palm agroecosystem and test sustainability strategies. We hypothesise that adjustments to oil palm management could increase structural complexity, stabilise microclimate, and reduce reliance on chemical inputs, thereby helping to improve levels of biodiversity and ecosystem functions. The Programme has established four major components: (1) assessing variability within the plantation under business-as-usual conditions; (2) the BEFTA Understory Vegetation Project, which tests the effects of varying herbicide regimes; (3) the Riparian Ecosystem Restoration in Tropical Agriculture (RERTA) Project, which tests strategies for restoring riparian habitat; and (4) support for additional collaborative projects within the Programme landscape. Across all projects, we are measuring environmental conditions, biodiversity, and ecosystem functions.
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- 2020
10. Co-producing a Research Agenda for Sustainable Palm Oil
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Padfield, Rory, Hansen, Sune, Davies, Zoe G., Ehrensperger, Albrecht, Slade, Eleanor M., Evers, Stephanie, Papargyropoulou, Effie, Bessou, Cécile, Abdullah, Norhayati, Page, Susan, Ancrenaz, Marc, Aplin, Paul, Dzulkafli, Shahirah Balqis, Barclay, Holly, Chellaiah, Darshanaa, Choudhary, Sonal, Conway, Samantha, Cook, Sarah, Copeland, Alison, Campos-Arceiz, Ahimsa, Deere, Nicolas J., Drew, Simon, Gilvear, David, Gray, Ross, Haller, Tobias, Hood, Amelia S.C., Huat, Lee Kim, Huynh, Nhat, Kangayatkarasu, Nagulendran, Koh, Lian Pin, Kolandai, Sanath Kumaran, Lim, Robin Ah Hee, Yeong, Kok Loong, Lucey, Jennifer M., Luke, Sarah H., Mitchell, Simon L., Montefrio, Marvin J., Mullin, Katherine, Nainar, Anand, Nekaris, K. Anne Isola, Nijman, Vincent, Nunes, Matheus, Nurhidayu, Siti, O'Reilly, Patrick, Puan, Chong Leong, Ruppert, Nadine, Salim, Hengky, Schouten, Greetje, Tallontire, Anne, Smith, Thomas E.L., Tao, Hsiao Hang, Tham, Mun Hou, Varkkey, Helena, Wadey, Jamie, Yule, Catherine M., Azhar, Badrul, Sayok, Alexander K., Vairappan, Charles, Bicknell, Jake E., Struebig, Matthew J., Padfield, Rory, Hansen, Sune, Davies, Zoe G., Ehrensperger, Albrecht, Slade, Eleanor M., Evers, Stephanie, Papargyropoulou, Effie, Bessou, Cécile, Abdullah, Norhayati, Page, Susan, Ancrenaz, Marc, Aplin, Paul, Dzulkafli, Shahirah Balqis, Barclay, Holly, Chellaiah, Darshanaa, Choudhary, Sonal, Conway, Samantha, Cook, Sarah, Copeland, Alison, Campos-Arceiz, Ahimsa, Deere, Nicolas J., Drew, Simon, Gilvear, David, Gray, Ross, Haller, Tobias, Hood, Amelia S.C., Huat, Lee Kim, Huynh, Nhat, Kangayatkarasu, Nagulendran, Koh, Lian Pin, Kolandai, Sanath Kumaran, Lim, Robin Ah Hee, Yeong, Kok Loong, Lucey, Jennifer M., Luke, Sarah H., Mitchell, Simon L., Montefrio, Marvin J., Mullin, Katherine, Nainar, Anand, Nekaris, K. Anne Isola, Nijman, Vincent, Nunes, Matheus, Nurhidayu, Siti, O'Reilly, Patrick, Puan, Chong Leong, Ruppert, Nadine, Salim, Hengky, Schouten, Greetje, Tallontire, Anne, Smith, Thomas E.L., Tao, Hsiao Hang, Tham, Mun Hou, Varkkey, Helena, Wadey, Jamie, Yule, Catherine M., Azhar, Badrul, Sayok, Alexander K., Vairappan, Charles, Bicknell, Jake E., and Struebig, Matthew J.
- Abstract
The rise of palm oil as the world's most consumed vegetable oil has coincided with exponential growth in palm oil research activity. Bibliometric analysis of research outputs reveals a distinct imbalance in the type of research being undertaken, notably a disproportionate focus on biofuel and engineering topics. Recognizing the expansion of oil palm agriculture across the tropics and the increasing awareness of environmental, social, and economic impacts, we seek to reorientate the existing research agenda toward one that addresses the most fundamental and urgent questions defined by the palm oil stakeholder community. Following consultation with 659 stakeholders from 38 countries, including palm oil growers, government agencies, non-governmental organizations, and researchers, the highest priority research questions were identified within 13 themes. The resulting 279 questions, including 26 ranked as top priority, reveal a diversity of environmental and social research challenges facing the industry, ranging from the ecological and ecosystem impacts of production, to the livelihoods of plantation workers and smallholder communities. Analysis of the knowledge type produced from these questions underscores a clear need for fundamental science programmes, and studies that involve the consultation of non-academic stakeholders to develop “transformative” solutions to the oil palm sector. Stakeholders were most aligned in their choice of priority questions across the themes of policy and certification related themes, and differed the most in environmental feedback, technology and smallholder related themes. Our recommendations include improved regional academic leadership and coordination, greater engagement with private and public stakeholders in Africa, and Central and South America, and enhanced collaborative efforts with researchers in the major consuming countries of India and China.
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- 2019
11. Appendix 3 Methods from Network reorganization and breakdown of an ant–plant protection mutualism with elevation
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Plowman, Nichola S., Hood, Amelia S.C., Moses, Jimmy, Redmond, Conor, Novotny, Vojtech, Klimes, Petr, and Fayle, Tom M.
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Supplementary methods and photos of ant species
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- 2017
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12. Appendix 2 Tables from Network reorganization and breakdown of an ant–plant protection mutualism with elevation
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Plowman, Nichola S., Hood, Amelia S.C., Moses, Jimmy, Redmond, Conor, Novotny, Vojtech, Klimes, Petr, and Fayle, Tom M.
- Abstract
Supporting tables S1-S26
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- 2017
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13. Appendix 1 Figures from Network reorganization and breakdown of an ant–plant protection mutualism with elevation
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Plowman, Nichola S., Hood, Amelia S.C., Moses, Jimmy, Redmond, Conor, Novotny, Vojtech, Klimes, Petr, and Fayle, Tom M.
- Abstract
Supporting figures S1-S7
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- 2017
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