Institution
Manchester Metropolitan University
Education•Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom•
About: Manchester Metropolitan University is a education organization based out in Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Context (language use). The organization has 5435 authors who have published 16202 publications receiving 442561 citations. The organization is also known as: Manchester Polytechnic & MMU.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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American Museum of Natural History1, University of Tartu2, University of Colombo3, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences4, University of Florida5, University of Palermo6, Goethe University Frankfurt7, Hobart Corporation8, Nakhon Phanom University9, University of Bamenda10, University of Gothenburg11, Naturalis12, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences13, Royal Botanic Gardens14, Universiti Malaysia Sabah15, United States Department of Agriculture16, Forest Research Institute Malaysia17, Humboldt State University18, Chinese Academy of Sciences19, Landcare Research20, University of Western Australia21, Estonian University of Life Sciences22, University of Southern Queensland23, Botanic Garden Meise24, Manchester Metropolitan University25, James Cook University26
TL;DR: Diversity of most fungal groups peaked in tropical ecosystems, but ectomycorrhizal fungi and several fungal classes were most diverse in temperate or boreal ecosystems, and manyfungal groups exhibited distinct preferences for specific edaphic conditions (such as pH, calcium, or phosphorus).
Abstract: Fungi play major roles in ecosystem processes, but the determinants of fungal diversity and biogeographic patterns remain poorly understood. Using DNA metabarcoding data from hundreds of globally distributed soil samples, we demonstrate that fungal richness is decoupled from plant diversity. The plant-to-fungus richness ratio declines exponentially toward the poles. Climatic factors, followed by edaphic and spatial variables, constitute the best predictors of fungal richness and community composition at the global scale. Fungi show similar latitudinal diversity gradients to other organisms, with several notable exceptions. These findings advance our understanding of global fungal diversity patterns and permit integration of fungi into a general macroecological framework.
2,346 citations
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TL;DR: The power a radical view writer as discussed by the authors is a best seller publication in the world with fantastic value and also material is incorporated with interesting words, it can be used to get ideas for reading.
Abstract: Have leisure times? Read power a radical view writer by Why? A best seller publication in the world with fantastic value and also material is incorporated with interesting words. Where? Merely here, in this website you could check out online. Want download? Obviously readily available, download them likewise below. Offered data are as word, ppt, txt, kindle, pdf, rar, and zip. This is really going to save you time and your money in something should think about. If you're seeking then search around for online. Without a doubt there are several these available and a lot of them have the freedom. However no doubt you receive what you spend on. An alternate way to get ideas would be to check another power a radical view. Whatever our proffesion, power a radical view can be excellent resource for reading. Discover the existing data of word, txt, kindle, ppt, zip, pdf, and also rar in this site. You can completely review online or download this book by below. Now, never miss it. GO TO THE TECHNICAL WRITING FOR AN EXPANDED TYPE OF THIS POWER A RADICAL VIEW, ALONG WITH A CORRECTLY FORMATTED VERSION OF THE INSTANCE MANUAL PAGE ABOVE.
2,116 citations
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National Center for Atmospheric Research1, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign2, German Aerospace Center3, Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences4, Earth System Research Laboratory5, Centre national de la recherche scientifique6, Forschungszentrum Jülich7, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis8, Manchester Metropolitan University9, Goddard Institute for Space Studies10, Joint Global Change Research Institute11, Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency12, Cornell University13, Desert Research Institute14, Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory15
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a new dataset of gridded emissions covering the historical period (1850-2000) in decadal increments at a horizontal resolution of 0.5° in latitude and longitude.
Abstract: We present and discuss a new dataset of gridded emissions covering the historical period (1850–2000) in decadal increments at a horizontal resolution of 0.5° in latitude and longitude. The primary purpose of this inventory is to provide consistent gridded emissions of reactive gases and aerosols for use in chemistry model simulations needed by climate models for the Climate Model Intercomparison Program #5 (CMIP5) in support of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Fifth Assessment Report (AR5). Our best estimate for the year 2000 inventory represents a combination of existing regional and global inventories to capture the best information available at this point; 40 regions and 12 sectors are used to combine the various sources. The historical reconstruction of each emitted compound, for each region and sector, is then forced to agree with our 2000 estimate, ensuring continuity between past and 2000 emissions. Simulations from two chemistry-climate models is used to test the ability of the emission dataset described here to capture long-term changes in atmospheric ozone, carbon monoxide and aerosol distributions. The simulated long-term change in the Northern mid-latitudes surface and mid-troposphere ozone is not quite as rapid as observed. However, stations outside this latitude band show much better agreement in both present-day and long-term trend. The model simulations indicate that the concentration of carbon monoxide is underestimated at the Mace Head station; however, the long-term trend over the limited observational period seems to be reasonably well captured. The simulated sulfate and black carbon deposition over Greenland is in very good agreement with the ice-core observations spanning the simulation period. Finally, aerosol optical depth and additional aerosol diagnostics are shown to be in good agreement with previously published estimates and observations.
1,953 citations
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01 Mar 1995TL;DR: A survey of what the authors perceive to be the most important theoretical and practical issues associated with the design and construction of intelligent agents is presented.
Abstract: The concept of an agent has become important in both Artificial Intelligence (AI) and mainstream computer science. In this article, we present a survey of what we perceive to be the most important theoretical and practical issues associated with the design and construction of intelligent agents. The article also includes a short review of current and potential applications of agent technology, and closes with a glossary of key terms, an annotated list of systems, and a detailed bibliography. Pointers to further reading are provided throughout.
1,573 citations
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University of Tartu1, University of Gothenburg2, American Museum of Natural History3, University of Aberdeen4, Centraalbureau voor Schimmelcultures5, Max Planck Society6, University of Oslo7, University of Copenhagen8, Finnish Forest Research Institute9, Manchester Metropolitan University10, Macaulay Institute11, University of Washington12
1,471 citations
Authors
Showing all 5608 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
David T. Felson | 153 | 861 | 133514 |
João Carvalho | 126 | 1278 | 77017 |
Andrew M. Jones | 103 | 764 | 37253 |
Michael C. Carroll | 100 | 399 | 34818 |
Mark Conner | 98 | 379 | 47672 |
Richard P. Bentall | 94 | 431 | 30580 |
Michael Wooldridge | 87 | 543 | 50675 |
Lina Badimon | 86 | 682 | 35774 |
Ian Parker | 85 | 432 | 28166 |
Kamaruzzaman Sopian | 84 | 989 | 25293 |
Keith Davids | 84 | 604 | 25038 |
Richard Baker | 83 | 514 | 22970 |
Joan Montaner | 80 | 489 | 22413 |
Stuart Robert Batten | 78 | 325 | 24097 |
Craig E. Banks | 77 | 569 | 27520 |