4.6 Article

Mobile piscivores and the nature of top-down forcing in Upper Amazonian floodplain lakes

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Ecology

Ecosystem Shift from Submerged to Floating Plants Simplifying the Food Web in a Tropical Shallow Lake

Dieison Andre Moi et al.

Summary: The study applied Bayesian latent variable regression and structural equation model to analyze the transition mechanisms between different vegetation states in a shallow lake and found the effects of nutrients and predators on these states.

ECOSYSTEMS (2021)

Article Marine & Freshwater Biology

Twenty-three-year timeline of ecological stable states and regime shifts in upper Amazon oxbow lakes

John W. Terborgh et al.

HYDROBIOLOGIA (2018)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Ontogenetic comparisons of standard metabolism in three species of crocodilians

C. M. Gienger et al.

PLOS ONE (2017)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Global nutrient transport in a world of giants

Christopher E. Doughty et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2016)

Article Fisheries

Lateral migration of fish between an oxbow lake and an Amazonian headwater river

Darwin Osorio et al.

ECOLOGY OF FRESHWATER FISH (2011)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

The Whale Pump: Marine Mammals Enhance Primary Productivity in a Coastal Basin

Joe Roman et al.

PLOS ONE (2010)

Review Oceanography

Environmental controls on food web regimes: A fluvial perspective

ME Power

PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY (2006)

Article Biodiversity Conservation

Abundance -: distribution relationships in fish assembly of the Amazonas floodplain lakes

C Granado-Lorencio et al.

ECOGRAPHY (2005)

Review Marine & Freshwater Biology

An assessment of animal species diversity in continental waters

C Lévêque et al.

HYDROBIOLOGIA (2005)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Whole-lake carbon-13 additions reveal terrestrial support of aquatic food webs

ML Pace et al.

NATURE (2004)

Article Ecology

Body mass of late quaternary mammals

FA Smith et al.

ECOLOGY (2003)