International audienceIn environmental science, the variability of biological responses in natural or laboratory populations is a well known and documented phenomenon. However, while an extensive literature aims to explain and understand the origin of variability, few try to use it as a demonstration of the population's response facing a stress. We propose here a theoretical framework that explores various patterns of variability both within and among populations, and seeks methods useful in bioevaluation methodologies. We also introduce the concept of “ecotoxicological niche” to characterize the ability of a population to endure contamination
Abstract Behavioral and physiological ecologists have long been interested in explaining the causes ...
Many scientific disciplines currently are experiencing a reproducibility crisis because numerous sci...
106 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1981.The recognition that populati...
Species' responses to environmental changes such as global warming are affected not only by trends i...
Differences within a biological system are ubiquitous, creating variation in nature. Variation under...
Synopsis Understanding how populations respond to rapid environmental change is critical both for pr...
International audienceCharacterizing variability in the extent and nature of responses to environmen...
Recent advances in statistical and computational methods have resulted in an increased availability ...
Based on theoretical considerations, a new approach to deal with the variation in properties and qua...
Human variability underlies differences in the degrees and ways in which people respond to environ m...
Natural populations can vary considerably in their genotypic and/or phenotypic diversity. Difference...
Phenotypes vary hierarchically among taxa and populations, among genotypes within populations, among...
The measurement of diversity reflects the variation of types (any categorical unit) across one or mu...
Background: Characterizing variability in the extent and nature of responses to environmental exposu...
Despite general consensus among ecologists that variation is ubiquitous and important in nature, eco...
Abstract Behavioral and physiological ecologists have long been interested in explaining the causes ...
Many scientific disciplines currently are experiencing a reproducibility crisis because numerous sci...
106 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1981.The recognition that populati...
Species' responses to environmental changes such as global warming are affected not only by trends i...
Differences within a biological system are ubiquitous, creating variation in nature. Variation under...
Synopsis Understanding how populations respond to rapid environmental change is critical both for pr...
International audienceCharacterizing variability in the extent and nature of responses to environmen...
Recent advances in statistical and computational methods have resulted in an increased availability ...
Based on theoretical considerations, a new approach to deal with the variation in properties and qua...
Human variability underlies differences in the degrees and ways in which people respond to environ m...
Natural populations can vary considerably in their genotypic and/or phenotypic diversity. Difference...
Phenotypes vary hierarchically among taxa and populations, among genotypes within populations, among...
The measurement of diversity reflects the variation of types (any categorical unit) across one or mu...
Background: Characterizing variability in the extent and nature of responses to environmental exposu...
Despite general consensus among ecologists that variation is ubiquitous and important in nature, eco...
Abstract Behavioral and physiological ecologists have long been interested in explaining the causes ...
Many scientific disciplines currently are experiencing a reproducibility crisis because numerous sci...
106 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1981.The recognition that populati...