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Content with tag historical ecology .
The Iberian wolf occupied at least 65% of the Iberian Peninsula in the mid-19th century, three times more than today
A scientific team led by the Doñana Biological Station - CSIC reviews historical documentation to estimate the distribution of the wolf in Spain in the 19th century
The results show that the...
The results show that the...
The aquatic fauna that arrived at a wish of a king
A study by Miguel Clavero, a researcher at the Doñana Biological Station – CSIC, reconstructs the history of the first introductions of pike, common carp, tench and Italian crayfish into...
One century of crayfish invasions
The red swamp crayfish (Procambarus clarkii), native to the southern United States and north-eastern Mexico, is currently the most widely distributed crayfish globally, as well as one of the...
Historical citizen science to understand and predict climate-driven trout decline
Historical species records offer an excellent opportunity to test the predictive ability of range forecasts under climate change, but researchers often consider that historical records are scarce...
The native crayfish is a non-native species
Anciently introduced species can be confounded with native species because introduction pre-dates the first species inventories or because of the loss of the collective memory of the introductions....
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