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Next Generation Biomonitoring: Part Two, Volume 59, the latest release in the Advances in Ecological Research series, is the second part of a thematic on ecological biomo… Read more
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Immediately download your ebook while waiting for your print delivery. No promo code needed.
Next Generation Biomonitoring: Part Two, Volume 59, the latest release in the Advances in Ecological Research series, is the second part of a thematic on ecological biomonitoring. It includes specific chapters that cover aquatic volatile metabolomics using trace gases to examine ecological processes, next generation approaches to rapid monitoring Bio-aerosol and the link between human health and environmental microbiology, NGB in Canadian wetlands, CELLDEX/global monitoring of functional responses, Citizen Science and Biomonitoring, and more.
1. Aquatic volatile metabolomics – using trace gases to examine ecological processes
Michael Steinke
2. Next generation approaches to rapid monitoring Bio-aerosol and the link between human health and enviromental micorbiology
Robert Michael William Ferguson
3. NGB in Canadian wetlands
Donald Baird
4. Monitoring the biodiversity and functioning of terrestrial systems via high resolution trace gas fluxes
Kelly Robert Redeker
5. Computational approaches to gathering biomonitoring data from social media platforms: a superior solution to next generation biomonitoring challenges?
Jon Chamberlain
6. What more can the eDNA-NGS revolution bring to biomonitoing? - the untaped potenial of molecular methods
Alex J. Dumbrell
7. Bioinformatics for Biomonitoring: Species Detection and Diversity Estimates across Platforms and Tools
Joanne E. Littlefair
8. Derocles et al. Statistics from networks or other BioMonitoring – what are the statistics of measuring and evaluating change?
Athen Ma
9. CELLDEX/global monitoring of functional responses
Scott Tiegs
10. Citizen Science and Biomonitoring
Michael Pocock
DB
Dave has most recently begun to work with networks. He developed, with colleagues, a learning methodology to build networks from sample date. This has produced the largest, replicated network in agriculture. One of his particular interests is how behaviours and dynamics at the species level, as studied using the carabid-slug-weed system, build across species and their interactions to the dynamics of networks at the ecosystem level.
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MJ