Insights and approaches from the long-term Continuous Plankton Recorder survey contribute to better understanding of ecological synchrony
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Insights and approaches from the long-term Continuous Plankton Recorder survey contribute to better understanding of ecological synchrony
Populations of animals and plants – even those separated by thousands of miles – can fluctuate in synchrony, driven by shared environmental influences. This striking phenomenon, known as spatial synchrony, is the subject of a new synthesis study published in Ecology Letters, led by researchers at the University of Kansas and co-authored by Dr Lawrence ...
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