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Michael B. Bonsall

Researcher at University of Oxford

Publications -  275
Citations -  8738

Michael B. Bonsall is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Biology. The author has an hindex of 45, co-authored 251 publications receiving 7375 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael B. Bonsall include University of California, Santa Cruz & Imperial College London.

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Zika virus in the Americas: Early epidemiological and genetic findings

Nuno R. Faria, +60 more
- 15 Apr 2016 - 
TL;DR: Results of phylogenetic and molecular clock analyses show a single introduction of ZikV into the Americas, which is estimated to have occurred between May and December 2013, more than 12 months before the detection of ZIKV in Brazil.
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Measuring biodiversity to explain community assembly: a unified approach.

TL;DR: The objective here is to demonstrate how species, trait and phylogenetic diversity can be combined together from large to local spatial scales to reveal the historical, deterministic and stochastic processes that impact the compositions of local communities.
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Apparent competition structures ecological assemblages

TL;DR: It is found that whereas the two separate, single host–single parasitoid interactions are persistent, the three-species system with the parasitoids attacking both hosts species is unstable, and that one of the host species is eliminated from the interaction owing to the effects of apparent competition.
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Enemy-mediated apparent competition: empirical patterns and the evidence

Enrique J. Chaneton, +1 more
- 01 Feb 2000 - 
TL;DR: It is still difficult to determine the relative role of apparent competition vs indirect amensalism in natural food webs because most published studies have failed to document in full interactions via shared enemies.
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Computer Game Play Reduces Intrusive Memories of Experimental Trauma via Reconsolidation-Update Mechanisms

TL;DR: It was showed that intrusive memories were virtually abolished by playing the computer game Tetris following a memory-reactivation task 24 hr after initial exposure to experimental trauma, consistent with reconsolidation-update mechanisms.