
Robert O'Hara
Articles
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Nov 23, 2024 |
totaltheater.com | Robert O'Hara |Neil Harris |Michael Oberholtzer
Robert O’Hara’s scalding new comedy Shit. Meet. Fan. was sold out before it even opened, and it’s riotously funny, but it’s not really anything new. The hit status can be attributed to a cast stuffed with names familiar from TV (such as Neil Patrik Harris, Jane Krakowski, Debra Messing, and Constance Wu) and a limited run in a small Off-Broadway space at MCC Theater.
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Mar 7, 2024 |
onlinelibrary.wiley.com | Kwaku Adjei |Anders Finstad |Wouter Koch |Robert O'Hara
1 INTRODUCTION Species distribution models are essential ecology and conservation management tools that predict how natural and human factors affect biodiversity (Elith & Leathwick, 2009; Vermeiren et al., 2020).
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Feb 26, 2024 |
onlinelibrary.wiley.com | Joris H. Wiethase |Philip Mostert |Christopher R. Cooney |Robert O'Hara
1 INTRODUCTION Climate change is posing an increasing threat to the survival of many species and is expected to result in the loss of species at the local or global level (Panetta et al., 2018; Urban, 2015; Wiens, 2016). Non-climatic factors, such as anthropogenic land use change, are further threatening species through degradation of habitat, changes in land cover, and fragmentation (Haddad et al., 2015; Horváth et al., 2019; van Strien et al., 2019).
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Feb 8, 2024 |
nsojournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com | Robert O'Hara |Francis Hui |Knut A. Hovstad
Introduction The ecological niche of a species is a fundamental concept in ecology for studying the relationship between species and the environment (Grinnell 1924, Elton 1927, Hutchinson 1959). In community ecology, the concept of the niche has been of fundamental importance for theoretical development and to identify and understand drivers of species co-occurrence patterns (Wiens 2011).
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Jan 9, 2024 |
biorxiv.org | Robert O'Hara
AbstractOrdination methods have been used by community ecologists to describe and explore the communities they sample by reducing this variation down to a small number of dimensions. More recently, Joint Species Distribution Models have been developed to model and predict the distributions of several species simultaneously. Contemporary models for the data for both of these problems are essentially the same, called Generalised Linear Latent Variable Models (GLLVMs).
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