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Amber G. F. Teacher
Researcher at University of Helsinki
Publications - 21
Citations - 2803
Amber G. F. Teacher is an academic researcher from University of Helsinki. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Biodiversity hotspot. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 21 publications receiving 2456 citations. Previous affiliations of Amber G. F. Teacher include Royal Holloway, University of London & University of Exeter.
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PanTHERIA: a species‐level database of life history, ecology, and geography of extant and recently extinct mammals
Kate E. Jones,Jon Bielby,Marcel Cardillo,Susanne A. Fritz,Justin O'Dell,C. David L. Orme,Kamran Safi,Wes Sechrest,Elizabeth H. Boakes,Chris Carbone,Christina Connolly,Michael J. Cutts,Janine K. Foster,Richard Grenyer,Michael B. Habib,Christopher A. Plaster,Samantha A. Price,Elizabeth A. Rigby,Janna Rist,Amber G. F. Teacher,Olaf R. P. Bininda-Emonds,John L. Gittleman,Georgina M. Mace,Andy Purvis +23 more
TL;DR: PanTHERIA as mentioned in this paper is a species-level data set compiled for analysis of life history, ecology, and geography of all known extant and recently extinct mammalian species, collected over a period of three years by 20 individuals.
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The costs of carnivory
TL;DR: A model that predicts the mass-related energy budgets and limits of carnivore size within these groups shows that the transition from small to large prey can be predicted by the maximization of net energy gain; larger carnivores achieve a higher net gain rate by concentrating on large prey.
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HapStar: automated haplotype network layout and visualization
TL;DR: HapStar directly uses the network connection output data generated from Arlequin and uses a force‐directed algorithm to automatically lay out the network for easy visualization, and provides a straightforward user‐friendly interface, and publication‐ready figures can be exported simply.
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Assessing the long‐term impact of Ranavirus infection in wild common frog populations
TL;DR: This study follows up archived records of English common frog mortalities likely caused by Ranavirus with the first evidence of long-term localized population declines of an amphibian species which appear to be best explained by the presence of Ranav virus infection.
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Smartphones in ecology and evolution: a guide for the app‐rehensive
TL;DR: It is concluded that smartphones and their apps could replace many traditional handheld sensors, calculators, and data storage devices in ecological and evolutionary research.