Mostrando 361 - 380 Resultados de 651 Para Buscar '"Amazonía"', tiempo de consulta: 0.18s Limitar resultados
  1. 361
    “…The application of these models is illustrated with three data sets from Equatorial Guinea, Brazilian Amazonia region, and western Kenyan highlands. A brief discussion is also carried out on the future challenges of using these models in the context of malaria elimination.…”
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  2. 362
    “…Seven new species of Hymenoepimecis Viereck are described from Peruvian Andes and Amazonia, French Guiana and Ecuador: H. andina Pádua & Sääksjärvi, sp. nov., H. castilloi Pádua & Sääksjärvi, sp. nov., H. dolichocarinata Pádua & Sääksjärvi, sp. nov., H. ecuatoriana Pádua & Sääksjärvi, sp. nov., H. longilobus Pádua & Sääksjärvi, sp. nov., H. pucallpina Pádua & Sääksjärvi, sp. nov., and H. rafaelmartinezi Pádua & Sääksjärvi, sp. nov. …”
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  3. 363
    por Johnson, Michelle O., Galbraith, David, Gloor, Manuel, De Deurwaerder, Hannes, Guimberteau, Matthieu, Rammig, Anja, Thonicke, Kirsten, Verbeeck, Hans, von Randow, Celso, Monteagudo, Abel, Phillips, Oliver L., Brienen, Roel J. W., Feldpausch, Ted R., Lopez Gonzalez, Gabriela, Fauset, Sophie, Quesada, Carlos A., Christoffersen, Bradley, Ciais, Philippe, Sampaio, Gilvan, Kruijt, Bart, Meir, Patrick, Moorcroft, Paul, Zhang, Ke, Alvarez‐Davila, Esteban, Alves de Oliveira, Atila, Amaral, Ieda, Andrade, Ana, Aragao, Luiz E. O. C., Araujo‐Murakami, Alejandro, Arets, Eric J. M. M., Arroyo, Luzmila, Aymard, Gerardo A., Baraloto, Christopher, Barroso, Jocely, Bonal, Damien, Boot, Rene, Camargo, Jose, Chave, Jerome, Cogollo, Alvaro, Cornejo Valverde, Fernando, Lola da Costa, Antonio C., Di Fiore, Anthony, Ferreira, Leandro, Higuchi, Niro, Honorio, Euridice N., Killeen, Tim J., Laurance, Susan G., Laurance, William F., Licona, Juan, Lovejoy, Thomas, Malhi, Yadvinder, Marimon, Bia, Marimon, Ben Hur, Matos, Darley C. L., Mendoza, Casimiro, Neill, David A., Pardo, Guido, Peña‐Claros, Marielos, Pitman, Nigel C. A., Poorter, Lourens, Prieto, Adriana, Ramirez‐Angulo, Hirma, Roopsind, Anand, Rudas, Agustin, Salomao, Rafael P., Silveira, Marcos, Stropp, Juliana, ter Steege, Hans, Terborgh, John, Thomas, Raquel, Toledo, Marisol, Torres‐Lezama, Armando, van der Heijden, Geertje M. F., Vasquez, Rodolfo, Guimarães Vieira, Ima Cèlia, Vilanova, Emilio, Vos, Vincent A., Baker, Timothy R.
    Publicado 2016
    “…The relationship between stem mortality rates and AGB varies among different regions of Amazonia, indicating that variation in wood density and height/diameter relationships also influences AGB. …”
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  4. 364
    “…The Marine Extractive Reserve of the city of Soure (coastal area of eastern Amazonia) stands out for housing populations that have developed an intimate relationship with nature and have knowledge that can explain people's perception of climate changes. …”
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  5. 365
    “…Argumenta-se que estudos pioneiros com a ayahuasca datam do início do século XX e mencionam relatos de expedições à Amazônia desde 1850. Esses artigos e relatos são analisados pelo aspecto histórico da teoria do ator-rede e de estudos recentes. …”
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  6. 366
    por Kuypers, K. P.
    Publicado 2023
    “…For thousands of years another psychedelic, ayahuasca, is being used by tribes in western Amazonia for healing and divination, and in recent years its use has expanded worldwide. …”
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  7. 367
  8. 368
    “…The study area is located in the contact zone between three major Neotropical ecosystems: Amazonia, Caatinga, and Cerrado. The PNLM encompasses the largest dune fields in Brazil, wide shrubby areas (restingas), lakes, mangroves, and many freshwater lagoons. …”
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  9. 369
    “…Drought conditions in Amazonia are associated with increased fire incidence, enhancing aerosol emissions with degradation in air quality. …”
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  10. 370
    “…Anopheles darlingi Root is the most important malaria vector in the Amazonia region of South America. However, continuous propagation of An. darlingi in the laboratory has been elusive, limiting entomological, genetic/genomic, and vector–pathogen interaction studies of this mosquito species. …”
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  11. 371
    “…Field collections have been initiated in 2012 within the framework of the CEnter for the Study of Biodiversity in Amazonia (CEBA: www.labex-ceba.fr/en/). This dataset is a work in progress.  …”
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  12. 372
    “…(Morelloid clade) is found in low elevation habitats on the eastern Andean slopes and in Amazonia of Peru and Bolivia and is most similar to the higher elevation species Solanum aloysiifolium Dunal of Bolivia and Argentina. …”
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  13. 373
    “…In the empirical case of Tsimane’ forager–horticulturalists in Bolivian Amazonia, we provide a detailed characterization of net transfers of food according to age, sex, kinship and the net need of donors and recipients. …”
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  14. 374
    “…In this study, we used photographic records from camera traps to collect data on biogeography of white-lipped peccaries in order to answer some questions about the demography, distribution and population size of the species in Ecuador’s western Amazonia. We present new altitudinal records for the species (2,000 metres above sea level), along with some notes on herd size and activity patterns. …”
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  15. 375
    “…Here, we examine the diversity of P. indusiatus-like species in Brazilian Amazonia. We show a clear congruence between detailed morphological data and ITS, nuc-LSU and atp6 based phylogenetic analyses and three new species are described within the Brazilian indusiate clade. …”
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  16. 376
    “…Adult Odonata were sampled in 98 streams in eastern Amazonia, Brazil. The physical features of each stream were evaluated and spatial variables were generated. …”
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  17. 377
    “…Automeris llaneros Decaëns, Rougerie & Bonilla, sp. nov., Automeris mineros Decaëns, Rougerie & Bonilla, sp. nov., and Automeris belemensis Decaëns, Rougerie & Bénéluz, sp. nov. are described from the Colombian Orinoco watershed, the Colombian Eastern Cordillera, and the area of endemism of Belém in the Brazilian Amazonia, respectively. They all belong to the Automeris bilinea (Walker, 1855) species subgroup, which comprises a number of species that are sometimes difficult to distinguish from each other using morphology alone. …”
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  18. 378
    “…The tropical rainforest of a highly dissected low hill from the upper Itaya river basin belongs to the western Amazonia region. Some investigations on the biodiversity of these rainforests were more focused on animals and plants diversity. …”
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  19. 379
    “…Afterward, in the Late Holocene, the advent of intensive agricultural food production systems, sedentism, and climate change significantly reshaped genetic and cultural diversity across the continent, particularly in the Andes and Amazonia. Furthermore, starting around the end of the 15th century, European colonization resulted in massive extermination of indigenous peoples and extensive admixture. …”
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  20. 380
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