スポンサーリンク
Center for Ecological Research Kyoto University | 論文
- Mating Behavior, Insemination and Sperm Transfer in the Ground Beetle Carabus insulicola
- Resolution of Evolutionary Conflict : a General Theory and Its Applications
- Changes in wood anatomy linked to canopy height in a Hawaiian wet montane forest along a substrate age gradient
- Survivorship of a monocarpic bamboo grass, Sasa kurilensis, during the early regeneration process after mass flowering
- Carbon and nitrogen contents of food bodies in three myrmecophytic species of Macaranga : implications for antiherbivore defense mechanisms
- Significance of leaf longevity in plants
- An ecosystem organization model explaining diversity at an ecosystem level : Coevolution of primary producer and decomposer
- Relationships between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning across different scales
- Resource-dependent reproductive adjustment and the stability of consumer-resource dynamics
- Phenology of a common roadside fig in Sarawak
- Positive and negative effects of livestock grazing on plant diversity of Mongolian nomadic pasturelands along a slope with soil moisture gradient
- Various population fluctuation patterns of light-attracted beetles in a tropical lowland dipterocarp forest in Sarawak
- Fruiting phenology of animal-dispersed plants in response to winter migration of frugivores in a warm temperate forest on Yakushima Island, Japan
- Pollinator limitaton in a deceptive orchid, Pogonia japonica, on a floating peat mat
- CONE OPSIN GENES IN AYU, PLECOGLOSSUS ALTIVELIS(Physiology)(Proceedings of the Seventy-Third Annual Meeting of the Zoological Society of Japan)
- Intraspecific variation in the status of ant symbiosis on a myrmecophyte, Macaranga bancana, between primary and secondary forests in Borneo
- Non-ant antiherbivore defenses before plant-ant colonization in Macaranga myrmecophytes
- Drought and the consequences of El Nino in Borneo : a case study of figs
- Plant phenology-mediated indirect effects : The gall midge opens the phenological window wider for a leaf beetle
- Comparison of volatile leaf compounds and herbivorous insect communities on three willow species