Results 271 to 280 of about 264,826 (351)

The Perverse Incentives of Climate Integration: Why Researchers Can't Deliver What Funding Institutions Demand

open access: yesPhilosophy &Public Affairs, Volume 54, Issue 1, Page 16-33, Winter 2026.
ABSTRACT Research funders increasingly require integration of future climate projections across health, agriculture, fisheries, and development economics, creating perverse incentives: institutions demand what current climate science cannot reliably deliver.
Eric B. Winsberg
wiley   +1 more source

Testing biodegradable interventions to disrupt plant–animal feedbacks and promote seagrass establishment

open access: yesRestoration Ecology, Volume 34, Issue 1, January 2026.
Biogeochemical and physical feedbacks are well known to prevent ecosystem recovery even after initial disturbance factors are mitigated. However, multi‐trophic interactions that may maintain disturbed areas have received less attention, despite their potential importance in mediating restoration success. In this study, we surveyed stingray feeding pits
Beatriz Marin‐Diaz   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

Inducing Compliance: Shaping Audiences' Perceptions in China's Cyber Crime Enforcement

open access: yesRegulation &Governance, Volume 20, Issue 1, Page 198-209, January 2026.
ABSTRACT Through case studies in the South Pacific and an examination of Chinese sources, this article examines two dimensions of China's cybercrime enforcement beyond its borders: how it manages to repatriate cybercriminals in the absence of formal extradition agreements, and why these repatriations are surrounded by a high degree of performativity ...
Graeme Smith
wiley   +1 more source

Diversification and evolution of Hawaiian Megalagrion damselflies (Pinapinao, Odonata: Coenagrionidae) Ka Ho‘omāhuahua a me ke Kumu Ho‘omohala o nā Pinapinao Megalagrion o Hawai‘i (Odonata: Coenagrionidae)

open access: yesSystematic Entomology, Volume 51, Issue 1, January‐March 2026.
The ancestor of today's pinapinao, Hawaiian Megalagrion damselflies, diverged from Ischnurinae around 51 MA and likely evolved for over 20 MA before colonizing the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. An ancestor of Megalagrion colonized the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands and diversified into ecological niches with four new breeding habitats and two new gill ...
Robert K. Hadfield   +10 more
wiley   +1 more source

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