
Colin J. Garroway
Articles
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Sep 13, 2024 |
onlinelibrary.wiley.com | Saeedeh Bani Assadi |Colin J. Garroway |Kevin Fraser |Colin G. Bridges
1 INTRODUCTION Animal migration may be driven by a complex interaction between inherent scheduling and external environmental factors, with the yearly migration of birds being one of the most prominent examples (Spiegel et al., 2017).
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Jun 1, 2024 |
onlinelibrary.wiley.com | Colin J. Garroway |Evelien de Greef |Kyle J. Lefort |Oceans Canada
1 BACKGROUND The Arctic is warming four times faster than the global average (Rantanen et al., 2022), thus we expect to see the earliest and most significant effects of climate change in Arctic ecosystems. The increase in spatial extent and duration of the Arctic Ocean's ice-free season is of particular concern. All credible emission scenarios predict that Arctic summers will be ice-free by the mid-20th century (Kim et al., 2023).
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May 23, 2024 |
nature.com | Deborah M. Leigh |Amy Vandergast |Margaret E. Hunter |Eric D. Crandall |W. Chris Funk |Colin J. Garroway | +5 more
AbstractGenetic and genomic data are collected for a vast array of scientific and applied purposes. Despite mandates for public archiving, data are typically used only by the generating authors. The reuse of genetic and genomic datasets remains uncommon because it is difficult, if not impossible, due to non-standard archiving practices and lack of contextual metadata.
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Apr 26, 2024 |
nature.com | Mark Urban |Luc De Meester |Yuyu Zhou |Brian C. Verrelli |Marta Szulkin |Patrick Roberts | +10 more
AbstractClimate change and urbanization are two of the most prominent global drivers of biodiversity and ecosystem change. Fully understanding, predicting and mitigating the biological impacts of climate change and urbanization are not possible in isolation, especially given their growing importance in shaping human society.
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Feb 13, 2024 |
nsojournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com | Riikka P. Kinnunen |Kevin Fraser |Chloe Schmidt |Colin J. Garroway
Introduction There have been widespread, drastic population declines in bird species over the past 50 years (Rosenberg et al. 2019). The estimated net loss of birds in North America is close to 3 billion, with 2.5 billion of these birds migratory (Rosenberg et al. 2019). This is comparable to patterns found globally (Gaston et al. 2003, Inger et al. 2015). To reverse these population declines knowledge of bird habitat preferences is needed, particularly of migratory bird species.
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