scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P356 | DOI | 10.1002/ECS2.2367 |
P50 | author | Christopher J. Lortie | Q38549313 |
P2093 | author name string | A. Filazzola | |
Abigail K. Hart | |||
H. S. Butterfield | |||
R. Kelsey | |||
P2860 | cites work | Land degradation and climate change: building climate resilience in agriculture | Q59887069 |
Used-habitat calibration plots: a new procedure for validating species distribution, resource selection, and step-selection models | Q63885878 | ||
An experimental approach to addressing ecological questions related to the conservation of plant biodiversity in China | Q91214935 | ||
Relative Abundance Of Endangered San Joaquin Kit Foxes (Vulpes Macrotis Mutica) Based On Scat–Detection Dog Surveys | Q98706219 | ||
Seasonal Occurrence and Habitat Utilization by Lizards in Southwestern New Mexico | Q98712721 | ||
Climate change mitigation: A spatial analysis of global land suitability for clean development mechanism afforestation and reforestation | Q24289457 | ||
Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: the PRISMA statement | Q27860868 | ||
Very high resolution interpolated climate surfaces for global land areas | Q29642135 | ||
Contemporary Drought and Future Effects of Climate Change on the Endangered Blunt-Nosed Leopard Lizard, Gambelia sila | Q31089202 | ||
A picture is worth a thousand data points: an imagery dataset of paired shrub-open microsites within the Carrizo Plain National Monument | Q31133828 | ||
Partitioning the effects of an ecosystem engineer: kangaroo rats control community structure via multiple pathways | Q34078459 | ||
Facilitation as a ubiquitous driver of biodiversity | Q35010910 | ||
SARCOPTIC MANGE IN ENDANGERED KIT FOXES (VULPES MACROTIS MUTICA): CASE HISTORIES, DIAGNOSES, AND IMPLICATIONS FOR CONSERVATION. | Q36144848 | ||
Facilitation shifts paradigms and can amplify coastal restoration efforts | Q36305956 | ||
Persistence of historical population structure in an endangered species despite near-complete biome conversion in California's San Joaquin Desert | Q36332650 | ||
The need for evidence-based conservation | Q36479161 | ||
Carnivore use of avocado orchards across an agricultural-wildland gradient | Q36976321 | ||
A strategy for prioritizing threats and recovery actions for at-risk species | Q38962079 | ||
Anthropogenic Degradation of the Southern California Desert Ecosystem and Prospects for Natural Recovery and Restoration | Q39191042 | ||
The Groot Effect: Plant facilitation and desert shrub regrowth following extensive damage | Q48043697 | ||
Lessons from meta-analysis in ecology and evolution: the need for trans-disciplinary evidence synthesis methodologies | Q48168160 | ||
Lack of native species recovery following severe exotic disturbance in southern Californian shrublands | Q55842056 | ||
Identifying appropriate flagship species: the importance of culture and local contexts | Q55934091 | ||
Farming the planet: 1. Geographic distribution of global agricultural lands in the year 2000 | Q56168542 | ||
Root Inputs Influence Soil Water Holding Capacity and Differentially Influence the Growth of Native versus Exotic Annual Species in an Arid Ecosystem | Q56446792 | ||
Uses and misuses of meta-analysis in plant ecology | Q56450607 | ||
Phytolith evidence for the extent and nature of prehistoric Californian grasslands | Q56475992 | ||
Understanding co-occurrence by modelling species simultaneously with a Joint Species Distribution Model (JSDM) | Q56785310 | ||
Ghost of habitat past: historic habitat affects the contemporary distribution of giant garter snakes in a modified landscape | Q56853667 | ||
Functional assessment of animal interactions with shrub-facilitation complexes: a formal synthesis and conceptual framework | Q56949048 | ||
Non-trophic interactions in deserts: Facilitation, interference, and an endangered lizard species | Q56949135 | ||
Zen and the art of ecological synthesis | Q56949153 | ||
A statistical explanation of MaxEnt for ecologists | Q57062660 | ||
A missing link between facilitation and plant species coexistence: nurses benefit generally rare species more than common ones | Q57196589 | ||
Recursive movement patterns: review and synthesis across species | Q57203421 | ||
A New Dryland Development Paradigm Grounded in Empirical Analysis of Dryland Systems Science | Q57230822 | ||
Is there room for all of us? Renewable energy and Xerospermophilus mohavensis | Q57411028 | ||
ORIGINAL ARTICLE: Predicting species distributions from small numbers of occurrence records: a test case using cryptic geckos in Madagascar | Q58006257 | ||
Science for improving the monitoring and assessment of dryland degradation | Q58070275 | ||
Constructing Cell-Based Habitat Patches Useful in Conservation Planning | Q58135874 | ||
Recent land-use/land-cover change in the Central California Valley | Q58303725 | ||
Future land-use related water demand in California | Q58400472 | ||
P433 | issue | 8 | |
P304 | page(s) | e02367 | |
P577 | publication date | 2018-08-01 | |
P1433 | published in | Ecosphere | Q1282144 |
P1476 | title | Better late than never: a synthesis of strategic land retirement and restoration in California | |
P478 | volume | 9 |
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