Cite
Environmental distances are more important than geographic distances when predicting spatial synchrony of zooplankton populations in a tropical reservoir.
MLA
Lopes, Vanessa G., et al. “Environmental Distances Are More Important than Geographic Distances When Predicting Spatial Synchrony of Zooplankton Populations in a Tropical Reservoir.” Freshwater Biology, vol. 63, no. 12, Dec. 2018, pp. 1592–601. EBSCOhost, https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13188.
APA
Lopes, V. G., Castelo Branco, C. W., Kozlowsky, S. B., Sousa, F. I. F., e Souza, L. C., & Bini, L. M. (2018). Environmental distances are more important than geographic distances when predicting spatial synchrony of zooplankton populations in a tropical reservoir. Freshwater Biology, 63(12), 1592–1601. https://doi.org/10.1111/fwb.13188
Chicago
Lopes, Vanessa G., Christina W. Castelo Branco, Suzuki, Betina Kozlowsky, Filho, Izidro F. Sousa, Leonardo Coimbra e Souza, and Luis Mauricio Bini. 2018. “Environmental Distances Are More Important than Geographic Distances When Predicting Spatial Synchrony of Zooplankton Populations in a Tropical Reservoir.” Freshwater Biology 63 (12): 1592–1601. doi:10.1111/fwb.13188.