Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 43
pro vyhledávání: '"Charles F. Leck"'
Autor:
Mary Allessio Leck, Charles F. Leck
Publikováno v:
The Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society. 132:323-354
Leck, M. A. (Dept. Biol., Rider Univ., Lawrenceville, NJ 08648) and C. F. Leck (Dept. Ecol. & Evol. Biol., Cook College, Rutgers Univ., New Brunswick, NJ 08901). Vascular plants of a Delaware River tidal freshwater wetland and adjacent terrestrial ar
Autor:
Charles F. Leck
Publikováno v:
Trends in Ecology & Evolution. 11:483-484
Autor:
Charles F. Leck
Publikováno v:
BioScience. 45:208-209
Autor:
Charles F. Leck
Publikováno v:
BioScience. 40:460-461
Autor:
Mary Allessio Leck, Charles F. Leck
Publikováno v:
Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society. 125:11
LECK, M. A. (Biology Department, Rider University, Lawrenceville NJ, 08648) AND C. F LECK (Graduate Program in Ecology and Evolution, Cook College, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, 08903). A ten-year seed bank study of old field succession in c
Autor:
Charles F. Leck
Publikováno v:
Trends in Ecology & Evolution. 8:37
Autor:
Charles F. Leck
Publikováno v:
The Auk. 96:343-352
The avifauna of a small forest island in lowland Ecuador was surveyed to detect recent extinctions. The 87-ha national forest, at Rio Palenque, has had serious declines in bird species numbers, even within the relatively short period of 1973-78. Amon
Autor:
Ronald L. Tilson, Charles F. Leck, M. C. Roberts, H. N. Chittenden, G. R. Batchelor, J. S. Pringle, S. T. Madden, J. M. Winterbottom, J. van Heerden, C. J. Stutterheim, Nicholas Wood
Publikováno v:
Ostrich. 48:110-121
Publikováno v:
Biological Conservation. 46:145-157
The breeding bird populations at Hutcheson Memorial Forest in central New Jersey, USA, were sampled by mist-netting from 1959 through 1985. Many of the long-distance migrant species, wintering in the neotropics, declined sharply (virtually to zero) d
Publikováno v:
Oecologia. 26:1-8
The effect of forest size on avian diversity was studied in oak forest patches in rural New Jersey. Number of bird species continued to increase significantly in old oak woods up through 40 ha. This was due to the progressive addition of carnivorous