10.4231/1YRJ-HZ02
Jason T. Hoverman , Logan Scott Billet
01/06/2021
These data correspond to a paper entitled "Timing and order of exposure to two echinostome species affect patterns of infection in larval amphibians" by Billet et al. published in the journal Parasitology in 2020:...
amphibians Echinostomatidae Forestry and Natural Resources metacercariae Priority effects
10.4231/2YMW-JY19
Daniel Moriasi , F. Mishili , Margaret W Gitau , Nicholas Kiggundu , Victoria Garibay
07/31/2021
Raw climate data from ground-based stations as available and shareable, and time series developed from Climate Forecast System Reanalysis (CFSR) for selected stations in three East African countries—Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda.
Agricultural and Biological Engineering Climate Hydroclimate Hydrologic Modeling Kenya laser_pulse Precipitation Tanzania Temperature Uganda Water Quality Modeling Water Resources water security
10.4231/1702-6M85
Brian Dilkes , Clint C S Chapple , Cole Wunderlich , Jeffrey Simpson , Xu Li
03/08/2021
Development of PODIUM: A tool to identify and extract from untargeted LC-MS data MS features that incorporated 13C-fed isotopic labels.
Biochemistry liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC–MS) metabolomics Plant Metabolism stable isotope labeling untargeted metabolomics analyses
10.4231/E00F-VE65
Henry D Legett , Viktor Baranov , Ximena E Bernal
04/28/2021
We investigated the seasonal interaction among a specialized eavesdropping, frog-biting midges (Corethrella spp.), and their anuran hosts. Overall abundance of midges decreased in the dry season with little differences in abundance of species.
acoustic communication biological sciences eavesdroppers Engystomops pustulosus frog-biting midges phenology Smilisca sila tropical seasonality
10.4231/SKRQ-CN44
Henry Legett , Rachel A Page , Ximena E Bernal
03/04/2021
We investigate how signal synchronization is shaped by natural and sexual selection in two frog species. Our results show that synchronization reduces exposure to eavesdroppers and relaxed selection by females is likely important.
acoustic communication biological sciences communi eavesdroppers relaxed selection synchrony
10.4231/TYHF-XJ20
Claire T Hemingway , Henry D Legett , Ximena E Bernal
03/04/2021
We show that male tree frogs reduce their attractiveness to eavesdropping enemies (bats and midges) by overlapping their calls at near-perfect synchrony with the calls of neighboring conspecifics taking advantage of an auditory illusion.
animal communication biological sciences communication network eavesdroppers illusion sensory exploitation synchrony
10.4231/1GSD-PZ56
Henry Legett , Ikkyu Aihara , Ryan P. Madden , Ximena E Bernal
03/04/2021
We investigated how the different call types of a Japanese stream breeding treefrog are affected by automobile traffic noise. This noise affected signal types in different ways suggesting some social functions will be disrupted more than others.
acoustic communication anthropogenic noise biological sciences Buergeria japonica frogs Noise noise pollution road effects
10.4231/KZT5-7E19
Geena M Darnell , Sara Zlotnik , Ximena E Bernal
04/06/2021
Complex color patterns can decrease capture of moving prey (motion dazzle effect). We found no support for the motion dazzle effect as striped crickets did not fare better than solid colored ones crickets that moved more were more likely to be eaten.
antipredator biological sciences camouflage cane toads coloration motion dazzle
10.4231/CAFS-9A27
11/16/2021
Data used in the figures of Phys. Rev. A 104, 063706 (2021) with short information in FILE_INFO.txt. Also contains .eps files and gnuplot routines.
10.4231/6CY1-5605
Barry Robert Pittendrigh , Weilin Sun
11/24/2021
SAWBO YouTube Analytics from 02-18-2011 to 10-09-2018
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