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Ecology: Operationalize biodiversity theory

Current Biology
The rise in global population and consumption intensifies the demand for ecosystem services, especially in agriculture. Recent research underscores the societal benefits of biodiversity. Operationalizing biodiversity theory and embracing diverse agricultural practices can enhance sustainability, supporting food security and climate resilience.
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Biodiversity: An Ecological Perspective.

The Journal of Applied Ecology, 1997
Despite acknowledgment that loss of living diversity is an international biological crisis, the ecological causes and consequences of extinction have not yet been widely addressed. In honor of Edward O. Wilson, winner of the 1993 International Prize for Biology, an international group of distinguished biologists bring ecological, evolutionary, and ...
C. J. Bibby   +3 more
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Statistics Ecology and Biodiversity

2018
We conducted research about Statistics Ecology and Biodiversity in collaboration with the Indonesian Speleological Society (ISS) and the Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI, Indonesia). The significance of this research is to calculate an index of species, richness, diversity, evenness, and dissimilarity.
Isma Dwi Kurniawan, Caraka, Rezzy E
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Biodiversity or Ecology?

Global Ecology and Biogeography Letters, 1997
Malcolm Coe   +5 more
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Biodiversity and Ecology

2009
Spencer Roger, Rob Cross
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Ecological sustainability and biodiversity

International Journal of Sustainable Development & World Ecology, 1999
SUMMARY The immense complexity of ecosystems severely hampers the underpinning of the ecological sustainability paradigm. The few existing definitions of ecological sustainability, such as ecosystem health, are based on the obsolete superorganism paradigm of ecosystems, assuming an equilibrium for every ecosystem.
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Ecology: Ecosystems and Biodiversity

2019
Using ecosystems as examples, this chapter engages with the emergence of understanding life by producing and assembling modules of knowledge, and finally linking them to create a holistic picture of the entire system. Ecosystems as theoretical units of arbitrary size are understood to consist of abiotic and biotic components on the one hand and of the ...
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Biodiversity and Ecological Theories

2010
Recent publications have pitted, on the one hand, the neutral theory of biodiversity – that leaves ample room for demographic processes such as reproduction, mortality, migrations, extinctions and speciation that have major random components – and, on the other hand, the ecological niche theory, more deterministic, that favours relationships with the ...
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