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David Welch

Researcher at University of Auckland

Publications -  316
Citations -  12518

David Welch is an academic researcher from University of Auckland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Oncorhynchus. The author has an hindex of 60, co-authored 305 publications receiving 11086 citations. Previous affiliations of David Welch include AmeriCorps VISTA & James Cook University.

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Journal ArticleDOI

No negative outcomes of childhood middle ear disease in adulthood.

TL;DR: To test the hypothesis that childhood middle‐ear disease may have disadvantageous long‐term psychosocial consequences in adulthood, a large number of patients with middle-ear disease in childhood are diagnosed with at least some form of middle‐ ear disease in adulthood.
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Correction: Survival of Migrating Salmon Smolts in Large Rivers With and Without Dams.

TL;DR: In the legend below Table 1, the reference given at the end of the second sentence is incorrect, and annual survival to the lowest listening line in the Fraser River, whole-river survival in the Columbia River, and associated detection efficiencies were calculated using the CJS model and program MARK.
Posted ContentDOI

Real-time genomics to track COVID-19 post-elimination border incursions in Aotearoa New Zealand

TL;DR: The role of real-time viral genomics in containing the COVID-19 community outbreaks of Aotearoa New Zealand is discussed in this paper, where the authors reconstruct the viral transmission history from genomic sequences and demonstrate how genomics played a vital role in containing them.
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Overexploitation causes profound demographic changes to the protandrous hermaphrodite king threadfin (Polydactylus macrochir) in Queensland’s Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia

TL;DR: It is suggested that management intervention is urgently required to reduce fishing pressure and restore the natural demography of the population of king threadfin in Queensland's south-eastern Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia, between two periods between 1986 and 2007.
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The floristic changes of Scottish moorland dominated by heather (Calluna vulgaris, Ericaceae) but unburnt for 50 years and kept checked by moderate grazing

David Welch
TL;DR: Vegetation and herbivore usage have been monitored since 1969/1970 at four moorland sites where heather remained the main species under moderate levels of grazing, and no evidence was found of species composition reacting to climate change or nitrogen deposition.