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Showing result 1 - 5 of 63 swedish dissertations matching the above criteria.
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1. Food Web Ecology -- individual life-histories and ecological processes shape complex communities
Abstract : This thesis sets out a food web framework for size-structured populations. The framework enables an ecological approach to food web modelling as the individual life-history from birth, through maturation, and ultimately death is explicitly resolved with the use of bioenergetics based on individual body size. READ MORE
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2. Cascading extinctions in food webs : local and regional processes
Abstract : Ecological communities all over the world are loosing biodiversity due to different kinds of human activities and there is an urgent need of understanding how those losses affect the function of the ecosystems on which we all depend. The community's response to species losses is likely to depend on both the structure of the local community as well as its interactions with surrounding communities. READ MORE
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3. Species extinctions in food webs : local and regional processes
Abstract : Loss of biodiversity is one of the most severe threats to the ecosystems of the world. The major causes behind the high population and species extinction rates are anthropogenic activities such as overharvesting of natural populations, pollution, climate change and destruction and fragmentation of natural habitats. READ MORE
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4. Trophic interactions and behaviour : Studies relevant to a Baltic Sea biomanipulation
Abstract : The main theme of this thesis is the interactions of animals with the environment and each other. The thesis was written within the framework of a biomanipulation project “Pikeperch in Himmerfjärden”. READ MORE
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5. Species Responses to Environmental Fluctuations : impacts of food web interactions and noise color
Abstract : Species constantly experience changes in their environmental conditions owing to natural or human induces reasons. Understanding how species respond to these fluctuations are important for ecology, especially given the ongoing climate change. Empirical studies have shown that species respond differently to the same disturbance. READ MORE