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E. L. Berlow.
Strong effects of weak interactions in ecological communities.
Nature, 398:330-334, 1999.
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S. K. Morgan Ernest and J. H. Brown.
Delayed compensation for missing keystone species by colonization.
Science, 292:101-104, 2001.
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R. J. Hobbs and H. A. Mooney.
Broadening the extinction debate: population deletions and additions
in California and western Australia.
Conservation Biology, 12:271-283, 1998.
- 4
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J. B. Hughes, G. C. Daily, and P. R. Ehrlich.
Population diversity: its extent and extinction.
Science, 278:689-692, 1997.
- 5
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Peter Kareiva and Michelle Marvier.
Conserving biodiversity coldspots: recent calls to direct
conservation funding to the world's biodiversity hotspots may be bad
investment advice.
American Scientist, 91:344-351, 2003.
- 6
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K. McCann, A. Hastings, and G. R. Huxel.
Weak trophic interactions and the balance of nature.
Nature, 395:794-798, 1998.
- 7
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B. A. Menge, E. L. Berlow, C. A. Blanchette, S. A. Navarrete, and S. B. Yamada.
The keystone species concept: variation in interaction strength in a
rocky intertidal habitat.
Ecological Monographs, 64:249-286, 1994.
- 8
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R. T. Paine.
A note on trophic complexity and community stability.
American Naturalist, 103:91-93, 1969.
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T. B. Smith, L. A. Freed, J. K. Lepson, and J. H. Carothers.
Evolutionary consequences of extinctions in populations of a
Hawaiian honeycreeper.
Conservation Biology, 9:107-113, 1995.
- 10
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John N. Thompson.
Evolutionary ecology and the conservation of biodiversity.
Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 11:300-303, 1996.
Kent Holsinger
2005-10-11