[Журнал] Landscape Ecology - тома 1-25) [1987-2010, PDF, ENG] обновлено 29.03.2010

Страницы:  1
Ответить
 

Владислав Волков

Top Seed 01* 40r

Стаж: 17 лет 4 месяца

Сообщений: 1056

Владислав Волков · 17-Мар-10 04:58 (15 лет 8 месяцев назад, ред. 15-Апр-10 23:41)

Landscape Ecology
Обновление 29.03.2010: По просьбе пользователей не стал откладывать и добавл тома 21-25. В последнем томе только первые 4 номера, остальные понятно еще не вышли в печать. Это последнее глобальное обновление раздачи.
Обновление 27.03.2010: Добавлены тома 11-20.
Автор: Jianguo (Jingle) Wu (главный редактор)
Жанр:научный журнал
Издательство: Springer Netherlands
ISSN: 0921-2973 (печатное издание); ISSN: 1572-9761 (электронное издание)
Формат: PDF
Качество: eBook (изначально компьютерное)
Количество страниц: от 250 до 1500 (для томов)
Язык: Английский
Описание: Landscape Ecology - Ведущий научный журнал по Ландшафтной экологии. Основные научные направления: науки о Земле, биология, ландшафтная экология, лесоведение, лесное хозяйства, ботаника и экология растений. Журнал издается с 1987 года в издательстве Springer Netherlands. Главный редактор Jianguo (Jingle) Wu (профессор Института наук о жизни и Института устойчивого развития при Аризонском государственном университете, Темпе, США). Журнал ориентируется в первую очередь на фундаментальные междисциплинарные исследования и объединяет ученых со всего мира. Главной задачей журнала объеденение представителей биологических, геофизических и социальных наук с целью изучения формирования, динамики и пространственного многообразия природных и антропогенных ландшафтов. Журнал издается в виде номеров со сквозной нумерацией страниц (примерно от 4 до 10 номеров в год), объединяемые в тома. В настоящее время вышло 24 тома, и 25-й издается.
Собственное мнение: Журнал действительно хорош. Отлично иллюстрирован в лучших традициях Springera, будет интересен не только экологам, но и географам, ботаникам, тем кто интересуется ГИС-технологиями.
Доп. информация: Статьи всех номеров были соединены в единый файл для каждого соответствующего тома. Изначально все статьи существовали в виде отдельных pdf файлов. К файлам тома я добавил по 2 дополнительные страницы с обложкой и содержанием, и то и другое пришлось делать вручную, пример страницы с содержанием есть в скриншотах. Для удобства навигации все pdf документы имеют и оглавление. Страницы в pdf в большинстве случаев не соответствуют печатному изданию, так как пропущены пустые страницы, а также видимо некоторые страницы со служебной информацией (оглавление, выходные данные), однако все статьи, рецензии, информации о конференциях, информация о замеченных опечатках - ЕСТЬ.
В папке помимо журналов найдете таблицу MS Exel со списком статей. Крмое того есть папка [Electronic supplementary material_Landscape Ecology] Это дополнительный файлы к статьям, чаще всего это текстовые документы или дополнительные иллюстрации. Имеются дополнительные материалы к 4 последним томам. Название папки соответствует номеру страницы с которой начинается соответствующая статья в том или другом томе.
Скриншоты
Пожалуйста ВСЕ скачавшие, оставайтесь на раздаче, Возможности раздавать у меня сильно ограничены, а в скором времени вообще исчезнут на неопределенный срок вместе с интернетом.
Download
Rutracker.org не распространяет и не хранит электронные версии произведений, а лишь предоставляет доступ к создаваемому пользователями каталогу ссылок на торрент-файлы, которые содержат только списки хеш-сумм
Как скачивать? (для скачивания .torrent файлов необходима регистрация)
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

Владислав Волков

Top Seed 01* 40r

Стаж: 17 лет 4 месяца

Сообщений: 1056

Владислав Волков · 17-Мар-10 09:13 (спустя 4 часа, ред. 27-Мар-10 08:01)

ВСЕ статьи ВСЕХ номеров на состояние 24 марта 2010
1380 статей
Introducing landscape ecology. Frank B. Golley;. Volume 01. 1. 1--3
Neutral models for the analysis of broad-scale landscape pattern. Robert H. Gardner; Bruce T. Milne; Monica G. Turnei; Robert V. O'Neill;. Volume 01. 1. 19--28
Spatial simulation of landscape changes in Georgia: A comparison of 3 transition models. Monica Goigel Turner;. Volume 01. 1. 29--36
Perceived land use patterns and landscape values. Ervin H. Zube;. Volume 01. 1. 37--45
Boundary dynamics at the aquatic-terrestrial interface: The influence of beaver and geomorphology. Carol A. Johnston; Robert J. Naiman;. Volume 01. 1. 47--57
Creating landscape patterns by forest cutting: Ecological consequences and principles. Jerry F. Franklin; Richard T. T. Forman;. Volume 01. 1. 5--18
Effects of patch size, isolation and regional abundance on forest bird communities. D. van Dorp; P. F. M. Opdam;. Volume 01. 1. 59--73
Integration in land research for Third World development planning: An applied aspect of landscape ecology. R. L. Wright;. Volume 01. 2. 107--117
Allochthonous ecosystems. R. Bornkamm;. Volume 01. 2. 119--122
Biocybernetic and thermodynamic perspectives of landscape functions and land use patterns. Zev Naveh;. Volume 01. 2. 75--83
Impact of agricultural landscape structure on energy flow and water cycling. L. Ryszkowski; A. Kędziora;. Volume 01. 2. 85--94
Irrigation induced change in vegetation and evapotranspiration in the Central Valley of California. Marlyn L. Shelton;. Volume 01. 2. 95--105
Erratum. . Volume 01. 3. 189
News of interest to landscape ecologists. . Volume 01. 3. 189
Editor's comment. Frank B. Golley;. Volume 01. 3. 123--124
A comment on landscape values. S. A. Hendler;. Volume 01. 3. 125--127
Disturbance propagation by bark beetles as an episodic landscape phenomenon. Edward J. Rykiel; Robert N. Coulson; Peter J. H. Sharpe; Timothy F. H. Allen; Richard O. Flamm;. Volume 01. 3. 129--139
Species richness of urban forest patches and implications for urban landscape diversity. Elizabeth R. Hobbs;. Volume 01. 3. 141--152
Indices of landscape pattern. R. V. O'Neill; J. R. Krummel; R. H. Gardner; G. Sugihara; B. Jackson; D. L. DeAngelis; B. T. Milne; M. G. Turner; B. Zygmunt; S. W. Christensen; V. H. Dale; R. L. Graham;. Volume 01. 3. 153--162
Historical influence of man on the riparian dynamics of a fluvial landscape. Henri Décamps; Madeleine Fortuné; François Gazelle; Guy Pautou;. Volume 01. 3. 163--173
Estimating dispersibility of Acer, Fraxinus and Tilia in fragmented landscapes from patterns of seedling establishment. W. Carter Johnson;. Volume 01. 3. 175--187
Future directions in landscape ecology research. Frank B. Golley;. Volume 01. 4. 191--192
Theory and language in landscape analysis, planning, and evaluation. Richard E. Toth;. Volume 01. 4. 193--201
Descriptive capacity and indicative value of territorial variables in ecological cartography. C. L. Pablo; P. Martín Agar; A. Gómez Sal; F. D. Pineda;. Volume 01. 4. 203--211
Landscape planning: a working method applied to a case study of soil conservation. Frederick R. Steiner; Douglas A. Osterman;. Volume 01. 4. 213--226
Dynamics of small biotopes in Danish agricultural landscapes. Peder Agger; Jesper Brandt;. Volume 01. 4. 227--240
Changes in landscape patterns in Georgia, USA. Monica Goigel Turner; C. Lynn Ruscher;. Volume 01. 4. 241--251
News of interest to landscape ecologists. William H. Romme;. Volume 01. 4. 253--254
Passing a milestone. Frank B. Golley;. Volume 02. 1. 1--2
Quaternary landscape ecology: Relevant scales in space and time. Hazel R. Delcourt; Paul A. Delcourt;. Volume 02. 1. 23--44
Linking knowledge among spatial and temporal scales: Vegetation, atmosphere, climate and remote sensing. Forrest G. Hall; Donald E. Strebel; Piers J. Sellers;. Volume 02. 1. 3--22
Land-use changes in Illinois, ASA: The influence of landscape attributes on current and historic land use. Louis R. Iverson;. Volume 02. 1. 45--61
Resource utilization scales and landscape pattern. R. V. O'Neill; B. T. Milne; M. G. Turner; R. H. Gardner;. Volume 02. 1. 63--69
News notices. . Volume 02. 2. 135
Scale-dependent proximity of wildlife habitat in a spatially-neutral Bayesian model. Bruce T. Milne; Kevin M. Johnston; Richard T. T. Forman;. Volume 02. 2. 101--110
A review of models of landscape change. William L. Baker;. Volume 02. 2. 111--133
A proper scale. Frank B. Golley;. Volume 02. 2. 71--72
Landscape change under indirect effects of human use: the Savanna of Central Chile. Eduardo R. Fuentes; Reinaldo Avilés; Alejandro Segura;. Volume 02. 2. 73--80
Leaf litter redistribution among forest patches within an Allegheny Plateau watershed. Ralph E. J. Boerner; James G. Kooser;. Volume 02. 2. 81--92
The effect of spatial scale on Konza landscape classification using textural analysis. M. Duane Nellis; John M. Briggs;. Volume 02. 2. 93--100
News notice. . Volume 02. 3. 200
International dimensions of landscape ecology. . Volume 02. 3. 137--138
Advance regeneration and seed banking of woody plants in Ohio pine plantations: Implications for landscape change. Francisco J. Artigas; Ralph E. J. Boerner;. Volume 02. 3. 139--150
A regional analysis of total nitrogen in an agricultural landscape. Byron T. Kesner; Vernon Meentemeyer;. Volume 02. 3. 151--163
Wind dispersal and subsequent establishment of VA mycorrhizal fungi across a successional arid landscape. Michael F. Allen; Lawrence E. Hipps; Gene L. Wooldridge;. Volume 02. 3. 165--171
A methodology for analyzing rare species distribution patterns utilizing GIS technology: The rare birds of Tanzania. Ronald I. Miller; Simon N. Stuart; Kim M. Howell;. Volume 02. 3. 173--189
Are small-scale landscape features important factors for field studies of small mammal dispersal sinks?. Marybeth Buechner;. Volume 02. 3. 191--199
Landscape ecology and biological conservation. . Volume 02. 4. 201--202
Determination of ecological scale. David W. Carlile; John R. Skalski; John E. Batker; John M. Thomas; V. I. Cullinan;. Volume 02. 4. 203--213
Landscape structure effects on carabid beetles spatial patterns in western France. Françoise Burel;. Volume 02. 4. 215--226
Barriers as boundaries for metapopulations and demes of Peromyscus leucopus in farm landscapes. Gray Merriam; Michal Kozakiewicz; Etsuko Tsuchiya; Karen Hawley;. Volume 02. 4. 227--235
Vegetation complexes of flowing-water habitats and their importance for the differentiation of landscape units. Angelika Schwabe;. Volume 02. 4. 237--253
OUTENIQUA — A computer model to simulate succession in the mixed evergreen forests of the southern Cape, South Africa. J. C. Daalen; H. H. Shugart;. Volume 02. 4. 255--267
Announcements. . Volume 02. 4. 269--270
Fifth annual Landscape Ecology symposium. . Volume 03. 1. 64
Progress in Landscape Ecology. Frank B. Golley;. Volume 03. 1. 1--2
Disturbances and gap dynamics in a semiarid grassland: A landscape-level approach. Debra P. Coffin; William K. Lauenroth;. Volume 03. 1. 19--27
Medium scale landscape classification in the German Democratic Republic. Guenter Haase;. Volume 03. 1. 29--41
Landscape ecology of uncultivated lowlands in Central Spain. F. G. Bernáldez; J. M. Rey Benayas; C. Levassor; B. Peco;. Volume 03. 1. 3--18
The general ecological model of the Slovak Socialist Republic — Methodology and contents. Ladislav Miklós;. Volume 03. 1. 43--51
A framework for environmental management planning — A landscape-ecological approach. Kazuhiko Takeuchi; Dong-Kun Lee;. Volume 03. 1. 53--63
Announcement. . Volume 03. 2. 144
Environmental factors and ecological processes controlling vegetation patterns in boreal forests. Gordon B. Bonan;. Volume 03. 2. 111--130
Applications of satellite remote sensing to forested ecosystems. Louis R. Iverson; Robin Lambert Graham; Elizabeth A. Cook;. Volume 03. 2. 131--143
Paradigm shift. Frank B. Golley;. Volume 03. 2. 65--66
The land unit — A fundamental concept in landscape ecology, and its applications. Isaak S. Zonneveld;. Volume 03. 2. 67--86
Scaling of ‘landscapes’ in landscape ecology, or, landscape ecology from a beetle's perspective. John A. Wiens; Bruce T. Milne;. Volume 03. 2. 87--96
Tropical deforestation and species endangerment: the role of remote sensing. Walter E. Westman; Laurence L. Strong; Bruce A. Wilcox;. Volume 03. 2. 97--109
Predicting across scales comments of the guest editors of Landscape Ecology. Virginia H. Dale; Robert H. Gardner; Monica G. Turner;. Volume 03. 3. 147--151
Effects of changing spatial scale on the analysis of landscape pattern. Monica G. Turner; Robert V. O'Neill; Robert H. Gardner; Bruce T. Milne;. Volume 03. 3. 153--162
Geographical perspectives of space, time, and scale. Vernon Meentemeyer;. Volume 03. 3. 163--173
Temporal variance in lake communities: blue-green algae and the trophic cascade. Stephen R. Carpenter;. Volume 03. 3. 175--184
The ocean ‘landscape’. John H. Steele;. Volume 03. 3. 185--192
A hierarchical framework for the analysis of scale. R. V. O'Neill; A. R. Johnson; A. W. King;. Volume 03. 3. 193--205
Similitude, similarity, and scaling. Robert Rosen;. Volume 03. 3. 207--216
Quantifying scale-dependent effects of animal movement with simple percolation models. R. H. Gardner; R. V. O'Neill; M. G. Turner; V. H. Dale;. Volume 03. 3. 217--227
Broad-scale concepts for interactions of climate, topography, and biota at biome transitions. James R. Gosz; Peter J. H. Sharpe;. Volume 03. 3. 229--243
Predicting across scales: Theory development and testing. Monica G. Turner; Virginia H. Dale; Robert H. Gardner;. Volume 03. 3. 245--252
Spatial and temporal analysis of landscape patterns. Monica G. Turner;. Volume 04. 1. 21--30
Analyzing spatial and temporal phenomena using geographical information systems. Lucinda B. Johnson;. Volume 04. 1. 31--43
GIS: More than just a pretty face. Carol A. Johnston;. Volume 04. 1. 3--4
Regional modeling of grassland biogeochemistry using GIS. Ingrid C. Burke; David S. Schimel; Caroline M. Yonker; William J. Parton; Linda A. Joyce; William K. Lauenroth;. Volume 04. 1. 45--54
The use of a geographic information system to analyze long-term landscape alteration by beaver. Carol A. Johnston; Robert J. Naiman;. Volume 04. 1. 5--19
The spatial pattern of a northern conifer-hardwood landscape. John Pastor; Michael Broschart;. Volume 04. 1. 55--68
Modeling vegetation pattern using digital terrain data. Frank W. Davis; Scott Goetz;. Volume 04. 1. 69--80
Habitat corridors and the conservation of small mammals in a fragmented forest environment. Andrew F. Bennett;. Volume 04. 2. 109--122
Corridor use by small mammals: field measurement for three experimental types of Peromyscus leucopus. Gray Merriam; Alain Lanoue;. Volume 04. 2. 123--131
Influence of landscape structure on local and regional climate. R. A. Pielke; R. Avissar;. Volume 04. 2. 133--155
The elements of connectivity where corridor quality is variable. Kringen Henein; Gray Merriam;. Volume 04. 2. 157--170
Effects of habitat fragmentation on the red squirrel, Sciurus vulgaris L.. B. Verboom; R. Apeldoorn;. Volume 04. 2. 171--176
Spread of invading organisms. D. A. Andow; P. M. Kareiva; Simon A. Levin; Akira Okubo;. Volume 04. 2. 177--188
Summaries of articles published in 1989 in ‘Landschap’. . Volume 04. 2. 189--193
Meeting announcement. . Volume 04. 2. 193--194
Love of the land. . Volume 04. 2. 81--82
A polygon-based spatial (PBS) model for simulating landscape change. Roel M. J. Boumans; Fred H. Sklar;. Volume 04. 2. 83--97
Influence of a shrub corridor on movements of passerine birds to a lake littoral zone. Krzysztof Dmowski; Michal Kozakiewicz;. Volume 04. 2. 99--108
Inventing wheels. . Volume 04. 4. 195--196
Structural dynamic of a hedgerow network landscape in Brittany France. Françoise Burel; Jacques Baudry;. Volume 04. 4. 197--210
The long-term influence of past land use on the Walker Branch forest. V. H. Dale; L. K. Mann; R. J. Olson; D. W. Johnson; K. C. Dearstone;. Volume 04. 4. 211--224
The complex relationship between landscape and recreation. Dick Zee;. Volume 04. 4. 225--236
Historical land use and hydrology. A case study from eastern Noord-Brabant. G. Bas; M. Pedroli; Guus J. Borger;. Volume 04. 4. 237--248
The fractal shape of riparian forest patches. K. D. Rex; George P. Malanson;. Volume 04. 4. 249--258
Dependency of local mesotrophic fens on a regional groundwater flow system in a poldered river plain in the Netherlands. Martin J. Wassen; Aat Barendregt; Paul P. Schot; Boudewijn Beltman;. Volume 05. 1. 21--38
Landscape, law and public policy: conditions for an ecological perspective. Lynton K. Caldwell;. Volume 05. 1. 3--8
Home range: A fractal approach. Craig Loehle;. Volume 05. 1. 39--52
Nature and origin of stone stripes on the Columbia Plateau. George W. Cox; Jodee Hunt;. Volume 05. 1. 53--64
Continuity and discontinuity of the riparian vegetation along a fluvial corridor. Eric Tabacchi; Anne-Marie Planty-Tabacchi; Odile Décamps;. Volume 05. 1. 9--20
A GIS-supported method for detecting the hydrological mosaic and the role of man as a hydrological factor. Lotta Andersson; Åke Sivertun;. Volume 05. 2. 107--124
Some remarks on recent developments in landscape ecology as a transdisciplinary ecological and geographical science. Z. Naveh;. Volume 05. 2. 65--73
Estimating primary productivity of forested wetland communities in different hydrologic landscapes. William J. Mitsch; Jan R. Taylor; Kimberly B. Benson;. Volume 05. 2. 75--92
Metapopulation theory and habitat fragmentation: a review of holarctic breeding bird studies. Paul Opdam;. Volume 05. 2. 93--106
Spatial components of biotic diversity in landscapes of Georgia, USA. Sharon Recher Hoover; Albert J. Parker;. Volume 05. 3. 125--136
Multiple landscape scales: An intersite comparison. R. V. O'Neill; S. J. Turner; V. I. Cullinan; D. P. Coffin; T. Cook; W. Conley; J. Brunt; J. M. Thomas; M. R. Conley; J. Gosz;. Volume 05. 3. 137--144
Landscape-ecological mapping of the Netherlands. Kees J. Canters; Cees P. Herder; Aart A. Veer; Paul W. M. Veelenturf; Rein W. Waal;. Volume 05. 3. 145--162
Interpreting ecological patterns generated through simple stochastic processes. Kirk A. Moloney; Antoine Morin; Simon A. Levin;. Volume 05. 3. 163--174
Satellite image interpretation (SPOT) for the survey of the ecological infrastructure in a small scaled landscape (Kempenland, Belgium). R. Goossens; E. D'Haluin; G. Larnoe;. Volume 05. 3. 175--182
Small mammal and raptor densities in habitat islands; area effects in a south Swedish agricultural landscape. Jon Loman;. Volume 05. 3. 183--189
Landscape ecology as a theoretical basis for nature conservation. Lennart Hansson; Per Angelstam;. Volume 05. 4. 191--201
Effects of site, landscape features, and fire regime on vegetation patterns in presettlement southern Wisconsin. Lawrence A. Leitner; Christopher P. Dunn; Glenn R. Guntenspergen; Forest Stearns; David M. Sharpe;. Volume 05. 4. 203--217
Movements of small mammals in the heterogeneous landscape. Jakub Szacki; Anna Liro;. Volume 05. 4. 219--224
Simulated effects of increasing atmospheric CO2 and changing climate on the successional characteristics of Alpine forest ecosystems. Felix Kienast;. Volume 05. 4. 225--238
Transmutation and functional representation of heterogeneous landscapes. Anthony W. King; Alan R. Johnson; Robert V. O'Neill;. Volume 05. 4. 239--253
The use of a GIS in assessing the impacts of sea level rise on nature conservation along the Dutch coast: 1990–2090. F. Meulen; J. V. Witter; S. M. Arens;. Volume 06. 1. 105--113
Macroclimate, microclimate and dune formation along the West European coast. L. Wartena; J. H. Boxel; D. Veenhuysen;. Volume 06. 1. 15--27
Near-future sea level impacts on coastal dune landscapes. R. W. G. Carter;. Volume 06. 1. 29--39
The effects of changing wind regimes on the development of blowouts in the coastal dunes of The Netherlands. P. D. Jungerius; J. V. Witter; J. H. Boxel;. Volume 06. 1. 41--48
Soil development in the coastal dunes and its relation to climate. Jan Sevink;. Volume 06. 1. 49--56
Impact of climatic change on coastal dune landscapes of Europe. F. Meulen; J. V. Witter; W. Ritchie;. Volume 06. 1. 5--6
The possible influence of sea level rise on the precarious dunes of Devesa del Saler Beach, Valencia, Spain. E. Sanjaume; J. Pardo;. Volume 06. 1. 57--64
The sand dunes and their vegetation along the Mediterranean coast of France. Their likely response to climatic change. Jean-Jacques Corre;. Volume 06. 1. 65--75
Precepts, approaches and strategies. F. Meulen; J. V. Witter; W. Ritchie; S. M. Arens;. Volume 06. 1. 7--13
Morphology and vegetation of a dune system in SE Denmark in relation to climate change and sea level rise. P. Vestergaard;. Volume 06. 1. 77--87
Simulated impact of sea level rise on phreatic level and vegetation of dune slacks in the Voorne dune area (The Netherlands). V. Noest;. Volume 06. 1. 89--97
The possible impact of climatic change on the avian community of dune ecosystems. H. T. H. M. Meekes;. Volume 06. 1. 99--103
A spatial approach to ecological processes. Henri Décamps; Jean-Claude Lefeuvre;. Volume 06. 3. 117--119
Control of C,N,P distribution in soils of riparian forests. G. Pinay; A. Fabre; Ph. Vervier; F. Gazelle;. Volume 06. 3. 121--132
Establishment of woody plants in Mediterranean old fields: opportunity in space and time. Max Debussche; Jacques Lepart;. Volume 06. 3. 133--145
Landscape ecology: Population genetics at the metapopulation level. Domenica Manicacci; Isabelle Olivieri; Véronique Perrot; Anne Atlan; Pierre-Henri Gouyon; Jean-Marie Prosperi; Denis Couvet;. Volume 06. 3. 147--159
Effect of landscape structure and dynamics on species diversity in hedgerow networks. Françoise Burel;. Volume 06. 3. 161--174
Space heterogeneity, space use and short-range dispersal in Diptera: A case study. Yannick Delettre; Paul Tréhen; Patrick Grootaert;. Volume 06. 3. 175--181
Modelling the effects of forest fragmentation on certain species of forest-breeding birds. J. Lauga; J. Joachim;. Volume 06. 3. 183--193
Modelling bird communities/landscape patterns relationships in a rural area of South-Western France. Gérard Balent; Bernard Courtiade;. Volume 06. 3. 195--211
Do harlequin Mediterranean environments function as source sink for Blue Tits (Parus caeruleus L.)?. Jacques Blondel; Philippe Perret; Marie Maistre; Paula Dias;. Volume 06. 3. 213--219
Erratum. . Volume 06. 3. i
Pattern of Kirtland's warbler occurrence in relation to the landscape structure of its summer habitat in northern Lower Michigan. Xiaoming Zou; Corinna Theiss; Burton V. Barnes;. Volume 06. 4. 221--231
Identifying structural self-similarity in mountainous landscapes. Richard G. Lathrop; David L. Peterson;. Volume 06. 4. 233--238
The appearance of ecological systems as a matter of policy. Joan Iverson Nassauer;. Volume 06. 4. 239--250
Pseudoreplication: a sine qua non for regional ecology. William W. Hargrove; John Pickering;. Volume 06. 4. 251--258
Utilization of a habitat mosaic by cotton rats during a population decline. W. Z. Lidicker; J. O. Wolff; L. N. Lidicker; M. H. Smith;. Volume 06. 4. 259--268
Trail corridors as habitat and conduits for movement of plant species in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, USA. Mary Benninger-Truax; John L. Vankat; Robert L. Schaefer;. Volume 06. 4. 269--278
Effects of changing spatial scale on acoustic observations of patchiness in the Gulf Stream. R. W. Nero; J. J. Magnuson;. Volume 06. 4. 279--291
Interception of moving organisms: influences of patch shape, size, and orientation on community structure. Kevin J. Gutzwiller; Stanley H. Anderson;. Volume 06. 4. 293--303
Epidemiology theory and disturbance spread on landscapes. R. V. O’Neill; R. H. Gardner; M. G. Turner; W. H. Romme;. Volume 07. 1. 19--26
Toward a rule-based biome model. Ronald P. Neilson; George A. King; Greg Koerper;. Volume 07. 1. 27--43
Recent changes in landscape structure and function in a mediterranean region of SW Spain (1950–1984). Rocío Fernandez Ales; Angel Martin; Fernando Ortega; Enrique E. Ales;. Volume 07. 1. 3--18
Regional scale analysis of denitrification in north temperate forest soils. Peter M. Groffman; James M. Tiedje; Delbert L. Mokma; Stephen Simkins;. Volume 07. 1. 45--53
A hierarchical neutral model for landscape analysis. R. V. O’Neill; R. H. Gardner; M. G. Turner;. Volume 07. 1. 55--61
Animal movements and population dynamics in heterogeneous landscapes. A. R. Johnson; J. A. Wiens; B. T. Milne; T. O. Crist;. Volume 07. 1. 63--75
Relationships between landcover proportion and indices of landscape spatial pattern. Eric J. Gustafson; George R. Parker;. Volume 07. 2. 101--110
Factors affecting the dynamics of vegetation in the landscapes of shimokamagari Island, southwestern Japan. Nobukazu Nakagoshi; Yoko Ohta;. Volume 07. 2. 111--119
The shapes of adaptation: Historical ecology of anthropogenic landscapes in the southeastern United States. Julia E. Hammett;. Volume 07. 2. 121--135
Regional habitat appraisals of wildlife communities: a landscape-level evaluation of a resource planning model using avian distribution data. Curtis H. Flather; Stephen J. Brady; Douglas B. Inkley;. Volume 07. 2. 137--147
Satellite imagery as a tool to evaluate ecological scale. M. A. Simmons; V. I. Cullinan; J. M. Thomas;. Volume 07. 2. 77--85
Satellite remote sensing of breeding habitat for an African weaver-bird. David O. Wallin; Clive C. H. Elliott; Herman H. Shugart; Compton J. Tucker; Friedrich Wilhelmi;. Volume 07. 2. 87--99
What is landscape ecology, really?. John A. Wiens;. Volume 07. 3. 149--150
GIS technologies for aquatic macrophyte studies: I. Database development and changes in the aquatic environment. Marguerite M. Remillard; Roy A. Welch;. Volume 07. 3. 151--162
Avian response to landscape pattern: The role of species' life histories. Andrew J. Hansen; Dean L. Urban;. Volume 07. 3. 163--180
The landscape ecology of large disturbances in the design and management of nature reserves. William L. Baker;. Volume 07. 3. 181--194
Foraging in a fractal environment: Spatial patterns in a marine predator-prey system. Robert W. Russell; George L. Hunt; Kenneth O. Coyle; R. Ted Cooney;. Volume 07. 3. 195--209
A comparison of quantitative methods for examining landscape pattern and scale. Valerie I. Cullinan; John M. Thomas;. Volume 07. 3. 211--227
Spatial variation in forage nutrient concentrations and the distribution of Serengeti grazing ungulates. Steven W. Seagle; S. J. McNaughton;. Volume 07. 4. 229--241
Disturbances in tallgrass prairie: local and regional effects on community heterogeneity. Susan M. Glenn; Scott L. Collins; David J. Gibson;. Volume 07. 4. 243--251
The use of remotely-sensed satellite imagery for landscape classification in Wales (U.K.). Roy H. Haines-Young;. Volume 07. 4. 253--274
Land use dynamics within an urbanizing non-metropolitan county in New York State (USA). James A. LaGro; Stephen D. DeGloria;. Volume 07. 4. 275--289
The r.le programs for multiscale analysis of landscape structure using the GRASS geographical information system. William L. Baker; Yunming Cai;. Volume 07. 4. 291--302
Use of space by bank voles (Clethrionomys glareolus) in a polish farm landscape. Michŀ Kozakiewicz; Anna Kozakiewicz; Aleksy Łukowski; Tomasz Gortat;. Volume 08. 1. 19--24
Effects of corridor width and presence on the population dynamics of the meadow vole (Microtus pennsylvanicus). Vincent N. Polla; Gary W. Barrett;. Volume 08. 1. 25--37
The spatial extent and relative influence of landscape-level factors on wintering bird populations. Scott M. Pearson;. Volume 08. 1. 3--18
Wetland effects on lake water quality in the Minneapolis/St. Paul metropolitan area. Naomi E. Detenbeck; Carol A. Johnston; Gerald J. Niemi;. Volume 08. 1. 39--61
Developing alternative forest cutting patterns: A simulation approach. Habin Li; Jerry F. Franklin; Frederick J. Swanson; Thomas A. Spies;. Volume 08. 1. 63--75
Analysis of historic landscape patterns with a Geographical Information System — a methodological outline. Felix Kienast;. Volume 08. 2. 103--118
Effects of area on old-growth forest attributes: implications for the equilibrium landscape concept. R. T. Busing; P. S. White;. Volume 08. 2. 119--126
Induction of vertical zones in sub-alpine valley forests by avalanche-formed fuel breaks. Roger Suffling;. Volume 08. 2. 127--138
Anthropogenic landscape changes in Central Europe and the role of bioindication. Olaf Bastian; Arnd Bernhardt;. Volume 08. 2. 139--151
Rice production and climate change: design and development of a GIS database to complement simulation models. Dominique Bachelet; Andrew Herstrom; Doug Brown;. Volume 08. 2. 77--91
Roadside ditches as corridors for range expansion of the western harvester ant (Pogonomyrmex occidentalis Cresson). Michael N. DeMers;. Volume 08. 2. 93--102
Editorial comment: From global to regional landscape ecology. Almo Farina;. Volume 08. 3. 153--154
A new contagion index to quantify spatial patterns of landscapes. Habin Li; James F. Reynolds;. Volume 08. 3. 155--162
GIS technologies for aquatic macrophyte studies: Modeling applications. Marguerite M. Remillard; Roy A. Welch;. Volume 08. 3. 163--175
Deforestation patterns and their effects on forest patches. Wayne C. Zipperer;. Volume 08. 3. 177--184
Observed and modeled directional change in riparian forest composition at a cutbank edge. John A. Kupfer; George P. Malanson;. Volume 08. 3. 185--199
Lacunarity indices as measures of landscape texture. Roy E. Plotnick; Robert H. Gardner; Robert V. O'Neill;. Volume 08. 3. 201--211
A revised concept of landscape equilibrium: Disturbance and stability on scaled landscapes. Monica G. Turner; William H. Romme; Robert H. Gardner; Robert V. O'Neill; Timothy K. Kratz;. Volume 08. 3. 213--227
Relationships between a terrain-based hydrologic model and patch-scale vegetation patterns in an arctic tundra landscape. Bertram Ostendorf; James F. Reynolds;. Volume 08. 4. 229--237
Landscape graphs: Ecological modeling with graph theory to detect configurations common to diverse landscapes. Margot D. Cantwell; Richard T. T. Forman;. Volume 08. 4. 239--255
Relating Kirtland's warbler population to changing landscape composition and structure. John R. Probst; Jerry Weinrich;. Volume 08. 4. 257--271
Modeling multi-scale spatial ecological processes under the discrete event systems paradigm. Maria J. Perestrello Vasconcelos; Bernard P. Zeigler; Lee A. Graham;. Volume 08. 4. 273--286
Changes of plant cover and land use types (1950's to 1980's) in three mire reserves and their neighbourhood in Estonia. Kiira Aaviksoo;. Volume 08. 4. 287--301
Using fractal analysis to assess how species perceive landscape structure. Kimberly A. With;. Volume 09. 1. 25--36
Pattern and error in landscape ecology: A commentary. George Hess;. Volume 09. 1. 3--5
Alternative model formulations for a stochastic simulation of landscape change. R. O. Flamm; M. G. Turner;. Volume 09. 1. 37--46
Resolution and predictability: An approach to the scaling problem. Robert Costanza; Thomas Maxwell;. Volume 09. 1. 47--57
Landscape dynamics in crown fire ecosystems. Monica G. Turner; William H. Romme;. Volume 09. 1. 59--77
Mapping and analyzing landscape patterns. James D. Wickham; Douglas J. Norton;. Volume 09. 1. 7--23
Vertebrate distributions relative to clear-cut edges in a boreal forest landscape. Lennart Hansson;. Volume 09. 2. 105--115
Expansion of gallery forest on Konza Prairie Research Natural Area, Kansas, USA. Christina L. Knight; John M. Briggs; M. Duane Nellis;. Volume 09. 2. 117--125
Statistical treatment and comparative analysis of scale-dependent aquatic transect data in estuarine landscapes. Daniel L. Childers; Fred H. Sklar; Stephen E. Hutchinson;. Volume 09. 2. 127--141
Are home ranges fractals?. Arild O. Gautestad; Ivar Mysterud;. Volume 09. 2. 143--146
Home ranges reconsidered. Craig Loehle;. Volume 09. 2. 147--149
A Markov model of land-use change dynamics in the Niagara Region, Ontario, Canada. Michael R. Muller; John Middleton;. Volume 09. 2. 151--157
Pastoralism and plant cover in the lower Shabelle Region, Southern Somalia. Ahmed M. I. Barkhadle; Luca Ongaro; Sandro Pignatti;. Volume 09. 2. 79--88
A hierarchical approach to ecosystems and its implications for ecological land classification. Frans Klijn; Helias A. Udo Haes;. Volume 09. 2. 89--104
Regional forest cover estimation via remote sensing: the calibration center concept. Louis R. Iverson; Elizabeth A. Cook; Robin L. Graham;. Volume 09. 3. 159--174
Coincidences between different landscape ecological zones and growth forms of Cembran pine (Pinus cembra L.) in subalpine habitats of the Central Alps. Anselm Kratochwil; Angelika Schwabe;. Volume 09. 3. 175--190
Old-growth forest landscape transitions from pre-European settlement to present. Mark A. White; David J. Mladenoff;. Volume 09. 3. 191--205
Sampling to characterize landscape pattern. Carolyn T. Hunsaker; Robert V. O'Neill; Barbara L. Jackson; S. P. Timmins; Daniel A. Levine; Douglas J. Norton;. Volume 09. 3. 207--226
Distribution and dynamics of the red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris L.) in a landscape with fragmented habitat. Rob C. Apeldoorn; Claudio Celada; Wim Nieuwenhuizen;. Volume 09. 3. 227--235
Modeling the effects of forest harvesting on landscape structure and the spatial distribution of cowbird brood parasitism. Eric J. Gustafson; Thomas R. Crow;. Volume 09. 4. 237--248
Response of North American ecosystem models to multi-annual periodicities in temperature and precipitation. J. Alan Yeakley; Ron A. Moen; David D. Breshears; Martha K. Nungesser;. Volume 09. 4. 249--260
Forty-eight years of landscape change on two contiguous Ohio landscapes. John W. Simpson; Ralph E.J. Boerner; Michael N. DeMers; Leslie A. Berns; Francisco J. Artigas; Alejandra Silva;. Volume 09. 4. 261--270
A fractal model of vegetation complexity in Alaska. Willem W.S. Hees;. Volume 09. 4. 271--278
Fractal dimension estimates of a fragmented landscape: sources of variability. Alain Leduc; Yves T. Prairie; Yves Bergeron;. Volume 09. 4. 279--286
Temporal and spatial changes in an area of the New Jersey Pine Barrens landscape. Sandra S. Luque; Richard G. Lathrop; John A. Bognar;. Volume 09. 4. 287--300
A factor analysis of landscape pattern and structure metrics. K. H. Riitters; R. V. O'Neill; C. T. Hunsaker; J. D. Wickham; D. H. Yankee; S. P. Timmins; K. B. Jones; B. L. Jackson;. Volume 10. 1. 23--39
Reaching a landmark. Frank B. Golley;. Volume 10. 1. 3--4
Proposal on a criteria system for a National Red Data Book of Biotopes. J. Blab; U. Riecken; A. Ssymank;. Volume 10. 1. 41--50
Spatial organisation of landscapes and its function in semi-arid woodlands, Australia. John A. Ludwig; David J. Tongway;. Volume 10. 1. 51--63
An investigation of uncertainty in field habitat mapping and the implications for detecting land cover change. Andrew Cherrill; Colin McClean;. Volume 10. 1. 5--21
Landscape indices describing a Dutch landscape. R. Maureen Hulshoff;. Volume 10. 2. 101--111
Effects of sensor spatial resolution on landscape structure parameters. Barbara J. Benson; Mark D. MacKenzie;. Volume 10. 2. 113--120
Potential environmental and economic impacts of turfgrass in Albuquerque, New Mexico (USA). Carlos A. Blanco-Montero; Teri B. Bennett; Paul Neville; Clifford S. Crawford; Bruce T. Milne; Charles R. Ward;. Volume 10. 2. 121--128
Factors affecting the distribution and abundance of Western grey kangaroos (Macropus fuliginosus) and euros (M. robustus) in a fragmented landscape. G. W. Arnold; J. R. Weeldenburg; V. M. Ng;. Volume 10. 2. 65--74
Scale of heterogeneity of forage production and winter foraging by elk and bison. L. L. Wallace; M. G. Turner; W. H. Romme; R. V. O'Neill; Yegang Wu;. Volume 10. 2. 75--83
Effects of forest patch size on avian diversity. Nancy E. McIntyre;. Volume 10. 2. 85--99
The Allerton Park workshop revisited — A commentary. Paul G. Risser;. Volume 10. 3. 129--132
Some general principles of landscape and regional ecology. Richard T. T. Forman;. Volume 10. 3. 133--142
Longterm response of disturbance landscapes to human intervention and global change. William L. Baker;. Volume 10. 3. 143--159
Landscape change with agricultural intensification in a rural watershed, southwestern Ohio, U.S.A.. Kimberly E. Medley; Brian W. Okey; Gary W. Barrett; Michael F. Lucas; William H. Renwick;. Volume 10. 3. 161--176
Forecasting the spatial dynamics of gypsy moth outbreaks using cellular transition models. Guofa Zhou; Andrew M. Liebhold;. Volume 10. 3. 177--189
Human-mediated vegetation switches as processes in landscape ecology. J. Bastow Wilson; Warren Mc G. King;. Volume 10. 4. 191--196
Predicting the distributions of plant species at the regional scale: a hierarchical matrix model. A. J. Cherrill; C. McClean; P. Watson; K. Tucker; S. P. Rushton; R. Sanderson;. Volume 10. 4. 197--207
Movement rules for herbivores in spatially heterogeneous environments: responses to small scale pattern. John E. Gross; Colleen Zank; N. Thompson Hobbs; Donald E. Spalinger;. Volume 10. 4. 209--217
Change in spatial characteristics of forest openings in the Klamath Mountains of northwestern California, USA. Carl N. Skinner;. Volume 10. 4. 219--228
Culture and changing landscape structure. Joan Nassauer;. Volume 10. 4. 229--237
The effects of aggregating sub-grid land surface variation on large-scale estimates of net primary production. Lars L. Pierce; Steven W. Running;. Volume 10. 4. 239--253
Plant productivity and nitrogen gas fluxes in a tallgrass prairie landscape. Peter M. Groffman; Clarence L. Turner;. Volume 10. 5. 255--266
Deciduous forest and resident birds: the problem of fragmentation within a coniferous forest landscape. Bodil Enoksson; Per Angelstam; Karin Larsson;. Volume 10. 5. 267--275
Dispersal of annual plants in hierarchically structured landscapes. Sandra Lavorel; Robert H. Gardner; Robert V. O'Neill;. Volume 10. 5. 277--289
Regional forest fragmentation effects on bottomland hardwood community types and resource values. Victor A. Rudis;. Volume 10. 5. 291--307
A proximity-based approach to assessing habitat. John R. Rickers; Lloyd P. Queen; Greg J. Arthaud;. Volume 10. 5. 309--321
Error assessment in decision-tree models applied to vegetation analysis. Henry Lynn; Charles L. Mohler; Stephen D. DeGloria; Charles E. McCulloch;. Volume 10. 6. 323--335
Landscape-level interactions between topoedaphic features and nitrogen limitation in tallgrass prairie. Tracy L. Benning; Timothy R. Seastedt;. Volume 10. 6. 337--348
Spatial covariation of soil organic carbon, clay content, and drainage class at a regional scale. Eric A. Davidson;. Volume 10. 6. 349--362
The influence of scale and the spatial characteristics of landscapes on land-cover mapping using remote sensing. Aaron Moody; Curtis E. Woodcock;. Volume 10. 6. 363--379
Landscape structure and the disturbance regime at three rural regions in Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan. Mahito Kamada; Nobukazu Nakagoshi;. Volume 11. 1. 15--25
Effect of landscape position on the sediment chemistry of abandoned-channel wetlands. W. L. Schwarz; G. P. Malanson; F. H. Weirich;. Volume 11. 1. 27--38
Comparison of available soil water capacity estimated from topography and soil series information. Daolan Zheng; E. R. Hunt; Steven W. Running;. Volume 11. 1. 3--14
Effects of changing spatial resolution on the results of landscape pattern analysis using spatial autocorrelation indices. Ye Qi; Jianguo Wu;. Volume 11. 1. 39--49
Using diffusion models to simulate the effects of land use on grizzly bear dispersal in the Rocky Mountains. Randall B. Boone; Malcolm L. Hunter;. Volume 11. 1. 51--64
Correction. B. Enoksson; P. Engelstam; K. Larsson;. Volume 11. 2. 128
Spatial scale influence on longterm temporal patterns of a semi-arid grassland. Samuel D. Fuhlendorf; Fred E. Smeins;. Volume 11. 2. 107--113
Forest roads and landscape structure in the southern Rocky Mountains. James R. Miller; Linda A. Joyce; Richard L. Knight; Rudy M. King;. Volume 11. 2. 115--127
Characterizing the complexity of landscape boundaries by remote sensing. Jean Paul Metzger; Etienne Muller;. Volume 11. 2. 65--77
Modelling the inter-relationships between habitat patchiness, dispersal capability and metapopulation persistence of the endangered species, Leadbeater's possum, in south-eastern Australia. D. B. Lindenmayer; H. P. Possingham;. Volume 11. 2. 79--105
The modifiable areal unit problem and implications for landscape ecology. Dennis E. Jelinski; Jianguo Wu;. Volume 11. 3. 129--140
Landscape influences on stream biotic integrity assessed at multiple spatial scales. Nancy E. Roth; J. David Allan; Donna L. Erickson;. Volume 11. 3. 141--156
Plant-species richness in corridor intersections: is intersection shape influential?. Samuel K. Riffell; Kevin J. Gutzwiller;. Volume 11. 3. 157--168
Scale problems in reporting landscape pattern at the regional scale. R. V. O'Neill; C. T. Hunsaker; S. P. Timmins; B. L. Jackson; K. B. Jones; K. H. Riitters; J. D. Wickham;. Volume 11. 3. 169--180
Habitat fragmentation and parasitism of a forest damselfly. Philip D. Taylor; Gray Merriam;. Volume 11. 3. 181--189
Comparison of available soil water capacity estimated from topography and soil series information. D. Zheng; E. R. Hunt; S. W. Running;. Volume 11. 3. 191--192
Water, society and landscape ecology. Robert J. Naiman;. Volume 11. 4. 193--196
A note on contagion indices for landscape analysis. Kurt H. Riitters; Robert V. O'Neill; James D. Wickham; K. Bruce Jones;. Volume 11. 4. 197--202
Comparison of habitat-isolation parameters in relation to fragmented distribution patterns in the tree frog (Hyla arborea). Claire C. Vos; Anton H. P. Stumpel;. Volume 11. 4. 203--214
Effects of fire frequency on plant communities and landscape pattern in the Massif des Aspres (southern France). Louis Trabaud; Jean-François Galtié;. Volume 11. 4. 215--224
Forest spread and phase transitions at forest-prairie ecotones in Kansas, U.S.A.. Craig Loehle; Bai-Lian Li; Ronald C. Sundell;. Volume 11. 4. 225--235
A GIS-based index for relating landscape characteristics to potential nitrogen leaching to wetlands. Karen A. Poiani; Barbara L. Bedford; Michael D. Merrill;. Volume 11. 4. 237--255
Transition rule complexity in grid-based automata models. W. Michael Childress; Edward J. Rykiel; William Forsythe; Bai -Lian Li; Hsin-i Wu;. Volume 11. 5. 257--266
Land-use changes and sustainable development in mountain areas: a case study in the Spanish Pyrenees. José M. García-Ruiz; Teodora Lasanta; Purificación Ruiz-Flano; Luis Ortigosa; Sue White; Constanza González; Carlos Martí;. Volume 11. 5. 267--277
Effect of landscape structure on Common Vole (Microtus arvalis) distribution and abundance at several space scales. P. Delattre; P. Giraudoux; J. Baudry; J. P. Quéré; E. Fichet;. Volume 11. 5. 279--288
The VFractal: a new estimator for fractal dimension of animal movement paths. Vilis O. Nams;. Volume 11. 5. 289--297
Effects of patch shape on the number of organisms. Toshihide Hamazaki;. Volume 11. 5. 299--306
Relationships between watershed Stressors and sediment contamination in Chesapeake Bay estuaries. Randy L. Comeleo; John F. Paul; Peter V. August; Jane Copeland; Carol Baker; Stephen S. Hale; Richard W. Latimer;. Volume 11. 5. 307--319
Changes in editorship ofLandscape Ecology. Robert H. Gardner;. Volume 11. 6. 321
A state of transition. Frank B. Golley;. Volume 11. 6. 321--323
Landscape level effects of modern forestry on bird communities in North Swedish boreal forests. Lars Edenius; Johan Elmberg;. Volume 11. 6. 325--338
A dynamic landscape simulation model for the alkaline grasslands on Songnen Plain in northeast China. Qiong Gao; Jiangdong Li; Huiying Zheng;. Volume 11. 6. 339--349
Relationships between landforms, geomorphic processes, and plant communities on a watershed in the northern Chihuahuan Desert. Steven M. Wondzell; Gary L. Cunningham; Dominique Bachelet;. Volume 11. 6. 351--362
Presettlement landscape heterogeneity: Evaluating grain of resolution using General Land Office Survey data. Hazel R. Delcourt; Paul A. Delcourt;. Volume 11. 6. 363--381
Boundary-fitted grid in landscape modeling. Kang-Ren Jin; Yegang Wu;. Volume 12. 1. 19--26
Effects of feedbacks and seed rain on ecotone patterns. George P. Malanson;. Volume 12. 1. 27--38
Editorial: Landscape ecology in a changing globalized environment. Francesco di Castri;. Volume 12. 1. 3--5
Migration rates of grassland plants along corridors in fragmented landscapes assessed with a cellular automation model. Dirk van Dorp; Peter Schippers; Jan M. van Groenendael;. Volume 12. 1. 39--50
Rural depopulation and recent landscape changes in a Mediterranean region: Consequences to the breeding avifauna. Eric Preiss; Jean-Louis Martin; Max Debussche;. Volume 12. 1. 51--61
Selection of scale for Everglades landscape models. Jayantha Obeysekera; Ken Rutchey;. Volume 12. 1. 7--18
The importance of linear landscape elements for the pipistrellePipistrellus pipistrellus and the serotine batEptesicus serotinus. B. Verboom; H. Huitema;. Volume 12. 2. 117--125
Effects of habitat fragmentation on meadow vole (Microtus pennsylvanicus) population dynamics in experiment landscape patches. Rachel J. Collins; Gary W. Barrett;. Volume 12. 2. 63--76
Modelling bird distributions — a combined GIS and bayesian rule-based approach. Kenneth Tucker; Stephen P. Rushton; Roy A. Sanderson; Elaine B. Martin; John Blaiklock;. Volume 12. 2. 77--93
Response of high mountain landscape to topographic variables: Central pyrenees. Gabriel del Barrio; Bernardo Alvera; Juan Puigdefabregas; Carlos Diez;. Volume 12. 2. 95--115
Regional ecosystem simulation: A general model for simulating snow accumulation and melt in mountainous terrain. Joseph C. Coughlan; Steven W. Running;. Volume 12. 3. 119--136
Effects of landscape patterns on biotic communities. Joseph N. Miller; Robert P. Brooks; Mary Jo Croonquist;. Volume 12. 3. 137--153
Landscape analysis of plant diversity. Thomas J. Stohlgren; Michael B. Coughenour; Geneva W. Chong; Dan Binkley; Mohammed A. Kalkhan; Lisa D. Schell; David J. Buckley; Joseph K. Berry;. Volume 12. 3. 155--170
Spatio-temporal variations in sediment nutrient levels: the River Adour. René-Claude Brunet; K. Brian Astin;. Volume 12. 3. 171--184
Response of generalist and specialist insect herbivores to landscape spatial structure. Ian D. Jonsen; Lenore Fahrig;. Volume 12. 3. 185--197
A multi-scale analysis of landscape statistics. Douglas H. Cain; Kurt Riitters; Kenneth Orvis;. Volume 12. 4. 199--212
Fractals and search paths in mammals. Jordi Bascompte; Carles Vilà;. Volume 12. 4. 213--221
Prehistoric, historic, and present settlement patterns related to ecological hierarchy in the Eastern Upper Peninsula of Michigan, U.S.A.. Janet Silbernagel; Susan R. Martin; Margaret R. Gale; Jiquan Chen;. Volume 12. 4. 223--240
Rates and patterns of landscape change between 1972 and 1988 in the Changbai Mountain area of China and North Korea. Daolan Zheng; David O. Wallin; Zhanqing Hao;. Volume 12. 4. 241--254
The impact of landscape and adjacent land cover upon linear boundary features. Andrew Cherrill; Colin McClean;. Volume 12. 4. 255--260
The effects of landscape composition and physiognomy on metapopulation size: the role of corridors. Greg S. Anderson; Brent J. Danielson;. Volume 12. 5. 261--271
A Bayesian test of hierarchy theory: scaling up variability in plant cover from field to remotely sensed data. Valerie I. Cullinan; Mary Ann Simmons; John M. Thomas;. Volume 12. 5. 273--285
Landscape characteristics of disturbed shrubsteppe habitats in southwestern Idaho (U.S.A.). Steven T. Knick; John T. Rotenberry;. Volume 12. 5. 287--297
Predicting landslide vegetation in patches on landscape gradients in Puerto Rico. Randall W. Myster; John R. Thomlinson; Matthew C. Larsen;. Volume 12. 5. 299--307
Generating confidence intervals for composition-based landscape indexes. George R. Hess; Jeff M. Bay;. Volume 12. 5. 309--320
A relationship between spatial processes and a partial patchiness index in a grassland landscape. Qiong Gao; Xiusheng Yang;. Volume 12. 5. 321--330
A Gis-derived integrated moisture index to predict forest composition and productivity of Ohio forests (U.S.A.). Louis R. Iverson; Martin E. Dale; Charles T. Scott; Anantha Prasad;. Volume 12. 5. 331--348
List of Contributors. . Volume 12. 6. 411
Forest harvest patterns and landscape disturbance processes. Swee May Tang; Jerry F. Franklin; David R. Montgomery;. Volume 12. 6. 349--363
Landscape structure and breeding bird distribution in a sub-Mediterranean agro-ecosystem. Almo Farina;. Volume 12. 6. 365--378
Effects of changing landscape pattern and U. S. G. S. land cover data variability on ecoregion discrimination across a forest-agriculture gradient. David J. Mladenoff; Gerald J. Niemi; Mark A. White;. Volume 12. 6. 379--396
Landscape changes in Atlantic white cedar (Chamaecyparis thyoides) wetlands of the New Jersey Pinelands. Robert A. Zampella; Richard G. Lathrop;. Volume 12. 6. 397--408
A management driven investigation of landscape patterns of northern spotted owl nesting territories in the high Cascades of Oregon. Robert Ribe; Roberto Morganti; David Hulse; Robert Shull;. Volume 13. 1. 1--13
Multiscale sources of variation in ecological variables: modeling spatial dispersion, elaborating sampling designs. Claude Bellehumeur; Pierre Legendre;. Volume 13. 1. 15--25
Landscape features associated with lyme disease risk in a suburban residential environment. Denise H. Frank; Durland Fish; Fred H. Moy;. Volume 13. 1. 27--36
Quantifying the agricultural landscape and assessing spatio-temporal patterns of precipitation and groundwater use. Minghua Zhang; Shu Geng; Susan L. Ustin;. Volume 13. 1. 37--54
Foraging behavior of browsing ruminants in a heterogeneous landscape. Matthew J. Etzenhouser; M. Keith Owens; Donald E. Spalinger; S. Blake Murden;. Volume 13. 1. 55--64
Potential impact of harvesting for the long-term conservation of arboreal marsupials. Juli G. Pausas; Mike P. Austin;. Volume 13. 2. 103--109
Analysis of fine-scale spatial pattern of a grassland from remotely-sensed imagery and field collected data. Agustín Lobo; Kirk Moloney; Oscar Chic; Nona Chiariello;. Volume 13. 2. 111--131
Landscape context of rural residential development in southeastern Wisconsin (USA). James A. LaGro;. Volume 13. 2. 65--77
Geostatistical scaling of canopy water content in a California salt marsh. E.W. Sanderson; M. Zhang; S.L. Ustin; E. Rejmankova;. Volume 13. 2. 79--92
Spatial and temporal patterns of exotic shrub invasion in an Australian tropical grassland. Joel R. Brown; Jennifer Carter;. Volume 13. 2. 93--102
The impact of shifting cultivation on a rainforest landscape in West Kalimantan: spatial and temporal dynamics. Deborah Lawrence; David R. Peart; Mark Leighton;. Volume 13. 3. 135--148
Watershed analysis of forest fragmentation by clearcuts and roads in a Wyoming forest. Daniel B. Tinker; Catherine A.C. Resor; Gary P. Beauvais; Kurt F. Kipfmueller; Charles I. Fernandes; William L. Baker;. Volume 13. 3. 149--165
The behavior of landscape metrics commonly used in the study of habitat fragmentation. Christina D. Hargis; John A. Bissonette; John L. David;. Volume 13. 3. 167--186
A model of arctic tundra vegetation derived from topographic gradients. Bertram Ostendorf; James F. Reynolds;. Volume 13. 3. 187--201
Announcement. . Volume 13. 4. 269
Lightning, precipitation and vegetation at landscape scale. Deborah U. Potter; James R. Gosz; Manuel C. Molles; Louis A. Scuderi;. Volume 13. 4. 203--214
Landscape patterns of nitrogen mineralization and nitrification in southern Ohio hardwood forests. Sherri Jeakins Morris; R.E.J. Boerner;. Volume 13. 4. 215--224
Landscape pattern indices applied to Mediterranean subtidal rocky benthic communities. Joaquim Garrabou; Joan Riera; Mikel Zabala;. Volume 13. 4. 225--247
Quantifying the nitrogen retention capacity of natural wetlands in the large-scale drainage basin of the Baltic Sea. Åsa Jansson; Carl Folke; Sindre Langaas;. Volume 13. 4. 249--262
Distribution of woodland amphibians along a forest fragmentation gradient. James P. Gibbs;. Volume 13. 4. 263--268
Road ecology: A solution for the giant embracing us. Richard T.T. Forman;. Volume 13. 4. III--V
Predicting Southern Appalachian overstory vegetation with digital terrain data. Paul V. Bolstad; Wayne Swank; James Vose;. Volume 13. 5. 271--283
Plants, small mammals, and the hierarchical landscape classifications of Patagonia. J. Adrian Monjeau; Elmer C. Birney; Luciana Ghermandi; Robert S. Sikes; Laura Margutti; Carleton J. Phillips;. Volume 13. 5. 285--306
An analysis of structure of tree seedling populations on a Lahar. David R. Larsen; Lawrence C. Bliss;. Volume 13. 5. 307--323
Estimating regional forest productivity and water yield using an ecosystem model linked to a GIS. Scott V. Ollinger; John D. Aber; Anthony Federer;. Volume 13. 5. 323--334
Acknowledgements to Reviewers. . Volume 13. 6. 397
List of Contributors. . Volume 13. 6. 399
Distribution of the red imported fire ant, shape Solenopsis invicta, in road and powerline habitats. Judith H. Stiles; Robert H. Jones;. Volume 13. 6. 335--346
Scale detection in real and artificial landscapes using semivariance analysis. Joe E. Meisel; Monica G. Turner;. Volume 13. 6. 347--362
Spatial aspects of metapopulation survival – from model results to rules of thumb for landscape management. Karin Frank; Christian Wissel;. Volume 13. 6. 363--379
Hierarchical relationships between landscape structure and temperature in a managed forest landscape. Sari C. Saunders; Jiquan Chen; Thomas R. Crow; Kimberley D. Brosofske;. Volume 13. 6. 381--395
Contents of Volume 13. . Volume 13. 6. 401--402
Fire-induced changes in northern Patagonian landscapes. Thomas Kitzberger; Thomas T. Veblen;. Volume 14. 1. 1--15
Scaling properties in landscape patterns: New Zealand experience. Vladimir I. Nikora; Charles P. Pearson; Ude Shankar;. Volume 14. 1. 17--33
Temporal (1958–1993) and spatial patterns of land use changes in Haut-Saint-Laurent (Quebec, Canada) and their relation to landscape physical attributes. Daiyuan Pan; Gérald Domon; Sylvie de Blois; André Bouchard;. Volume 14. 1. 35--52
Effects of landscape spatial structure on movement patterns of the hispid cotton rat (Sigmodon hispidus). David R. Bowne; John D. Peles; Gary W. Barrett;. Volume 14. 1. 53--65
Effects of habitat fragmentation on Eurasian red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) in a forest landscape. Annika E. Delin; Henrik Andrén;. Volume 14. 1. 67--72
Dispersal success on fractal landscapes: a consequence of lacunarity thresholds. Kimberly A. With; Anthony W. King;. Volume 14. 1. 73--82
Controlling spatial structure of forested landscapes: a case study towards landscape management. Emin Z. Baskent;. Volume 14. 1. 83--97
Landscape ecology: the science and the action. . Volume 14. 2. 103
Plant-pest interactions in time and space: A Douglas-fir bark beetle outbreak as a case study. Jennifer Sarah Powers; Phillip Sollins; Mark E. Harmon; Julia A. Jones;. Volume 14. 2. 105--120
Soil saturation effects on forest dynamics: scaling across a southern boreal/northern hardwood landscape. John F. Weishampel; Robert G. Knox; Elissa R. Levine;. Volume 14. 2. 121--135
Transitions in forest fragmentation: implications for restoration opportunities at regional scales. James D. Wickham; K. Bruce Jones; Kurt H. Riitters; Timothy G. Wade; Robert V. O'Neill;. Volume 14. 2. 137--145
Spread of mistletoes (Amyema preissii) in fragmented Australian woodlands: a simulation study. Sandra Lavorel; Mark Stafford Smith; Nick Reid;. Volume 14. 2. 147--160
Potential impacts of changing agricultural activities on scenic beauty – a prototypical technique for automated rapid assessment. Marcel Hunziker; Felix Kienast;. Volume 14. 2. 161--176
The importance of patch attributes and context to the management and recovery of an endangered lagomorph. Elizabeth Forys; Stephen R. Humphrey;. Volume 14. 2. 177--185
Landscape history of a calcareous (alvar) grassland in Hanila, western Estonia, during the last three hundred years. Meelis Pärtel; Riina Mändla; Martin Zobel;. Volume 14. 2. 187--196
Agricultural soil redistribution and landscape complexity. Jonathan D. Phillips; Paul A. Gares; Michael C. Slattery;. Volume 14. 2. 197--211
Structure of plant communities and landscape patterns in alluvial meadows of two flood plains in the north-east of France. R. Selinger-Looten; F. Grevilliot; S. Muller;. Volume 14. 2. 213--229
Aspen regeneration in the Colorado Front Range: differences at local and landscape scales. Kuni Suzuki; Harumi Suzuki; Dan Binkley; Thomas J. Stohlgren;. Volume 14. 3. 231--237
Influence of within-field and landscape factors on aphid predator populations in wheat. Norman C. Elliott; Robert W. Kieckhefer; Jang-Hoon Lee; Bryan W. French;. Volume 14. 3. 239--252
A GIS-based plant prediction model for wetland ecosystems. Peter W. van Horssen; Paul P. Schot; Aat Barendregt;. Volume 14. 3. 253--265
Scale-dependent habitat use in three species of prairie wetland birds. David E. Naugle; Kenneth F. Higgins; Sarah M. Nusser; W. Carter Johnson;. Volume 14. 3. 267--276
Model description of dynamics of disturbance and recovery of natural landscapes. Mikhail B. Entel; Neil T.M. Hamilton;. Volume 14. 3. 277--281
Threshold levels of habitat composition for the presence of the long-tailed tit (Aegithalos caudatus) in a boreal landscape. G. Jansson; P. Angelstam;. Volume 14. 3. 283--290
Coupling past management practice and historic landscape change on John F. Kennedy Space Center, Florida. Brean W. Duncan; Shannon Boyle; David R. Breininger; Paul A. Schmalzer;. Volume 14. 3. 291--309
Temporal patterns of ecosystem processes on simulated landscapes in Glacier National Park, Montana, USA. Robert E. Keane; Penelope Morgan; Joseph D. White;. Volume 14. 3. 311--329
Responses of mammals to habitat edges: a landscape perspective – Preface to this Special Edition. . Volume 14. 4. 331
Responses of mammals to habitat edges: an overview. William Z. Lidicker;. Volume 14. 4. 333--343
Predator activity and predation on songbird nests on forest-field edges in east-central Illinois. Edward J. Heske; Scott K. Robinson; Jeffrey D. Brawn;. Volume 14. 4. 345--354
Responses of a small mammal community to heterogeneity along forest-old-field edges. Robert H. Manson; Richard S. Ostfeld; Charles D. Canham;. Volume 14. 4. 355--367
Spatially structured populations: how much do they match the classic metapopulation concept?. Jakub Szacki;. Volume 14. 4. 369--379
A controlled, hierarchical study of habitat fragmentation: responses at the individual, patch, and landscape scale. Michael A. Bowers; James L. Dooley;. Volume 14. 4. 381--389
Effects of habitat fragmentation on four rodent species in a Polish farm landscape. Michał Kozakiewicz; Tomasz Gortat; Anna Kozakiewicz; Miłosława Barkowska;. Volume 14. 4. 391--400
Vole outbreaks in a landscape context: evidence from a six year study of Microtus arvalis. P. Delattre; B. De Sousa; E. Fichet-Calvet; J.P. Quéré; P. Giraudoux;. Volume 14. 4. 401--412
Stochastic generating models for simulating hierarchically structured multi-cover landscapes. Glen D. Johnson; Wayne L. Myers; Ganapati P. Patil;. Volume 14. 5. 413--421
Predicting mammal species richness and distributions: testing the effectiveness of satellite-derived land cover data. Marcel Cardillo; David W. Macdonald; Steve P. Rushton;. Volume 14. 5. 423--435
Interactions between landscape structure and animal behavior: the roles of heterogeneously distributed resources and food deprivation on movement patterns. Nancy E. McIntyre; John A. Wiens;. Volume 14. 5. 437--447
Ownership and ecosystem as sources of spatial heterogeneity in a forested landscape, Wisconsin, USA. Thomas R. Crow; George E. Host; David J. Mladenoff;. Volume 14. 5. 449--463
Interrelationships between plant functional types and soil moisture heterogeneity for semiarid landscapes within the grassland/forest continuum: a unified conceptual model. David D. Breshears; Fairley J. Barnes;. Volume 14. 5. 465--478
Management of matter fluxes by biogeochemical barriers at the agricultural landscape level⋆. L. Ryszkowski; A. Bartoszewicz; A. Kędziora;. Volume 14. 5. 479--492
The distribution of plant species in urban vegetation fragments. Lucy Bastin; Chris D. Thomas;. Volume 14. 5. 493--507
Long-term, landscape patterns of past fire events in a montane ponderosa pine forest of central Colorado. Peter M. Brown; Merrill R. Kaufmann; Wayne D. Shepperd;. Volume 14. 6. 513--532
Fire frequency and size distribution under natural conditions: a new hypothesis. Chao Li; Ian G.W. Corns; Richard C. Yang;. Volume 14. 6. 533--542
The influences of land-use changes on hydrology and riparian environment in a northern Japanese landscape. Akiko Nagasaka; Futoshi Nakamura;. Volume 14. 6. 543--556
Fine-scale vegetation patches decline in size and cover with increasing rainfall in Australian savannas. John A. Ludwig; David J. Tongway; Robert W. Eager; Richard J. Williams; Garry D. Cook;. Volume 14. 6. 557--566
A case study of forest change in the Swiss lowlands. Matthias Bürgi;. Volume 14. 6. 567--576
Thermal infrared remote sensing for analysis of landscape ecological processes: methods and applications. Dale A. Quattrochi; Jeffrey C. Luvall;. Volume 14. 6. 577--598
Landscape Ecology and Species Conservation. Vincent J. Burke;. Volume 15. 1. 1--3
GAP management status and regional indicators of threats to biodiversity. David M. Stoms;. Volume 15. 1. 21--33
Incorporating biological information in local land-use decision making: designing a system for conservation planning. David M. Theobald; N.T. Hobbs; Tammy Bearly; Jim A. Zack; Tanya Shenk; William E. Riebsame;. Volume 15. 1. 35--45
Assessing land-use impacts on biodiversity using an expert systems tool. Patrick J. Crist; Thomas W. Kohley; John Oakleaf;. Volume 15. 1. 47--62
Gap analysis: concepts, methods, and recent results*. Michael D. Jennings;. Volume 15. 1. 5--20
Predicting broad-scale occurrences of vertebrates in patchy landscapes. Randall B. Boone; William B. Krohn;. Volume 15. 1. 63--74
Using spatial analysis to drive reserve design: a case study of a national wildlife refuge in Indiana and Illinois (USA). Forest S. Clark; R. Bernadette Slusher;. Volume 15. 1. 75--84
Landscape division, splitting index, and effective mesh size: new measures of landscape fragmentation. Jochen A.G. Jaeger;. Volume 15. 2. 115--130
Effects of landscape structure on nest predation in roadsides of a midwestern agroecosystem: a multiscale analysis. Timothy M. Bergin; Louis B. Best; Kathryn E. Freemark; Kenneth J. Koehler;. Volume 15. 2. 131--143
Connectivity of forest fuels and surface fire regimes. Carol Miller; Dean L. Urban;. Volume 15. 2. 145--154
Landscape change patterns in mountains, land use and environmental diversity, Mid-Norway 1960–1993. E. Gunilla A. Olsson; Gunnar Austrheim; Synnøve N. Grenne;. Volume 15. 2. 155--170
Forest fragmentation as an economic indicator. James D. Wickham; Robert V. O'Neill; K. Bruce Jones;. Volume 15. 2. 171--179
Editorial. . Volume 15. 2. 3--4
Landscape effects on the population dynamics of the fossorial form of the water vole (Arvicola terrestris sherman). Rémi Duhamel; Jean-Pierre Quéré; Pierre Delattre; Patrick Giraudoux;. Volume 15. 2. 89--98
A multi-scale spatial analysis method for point data. Jennifer H. Davis; Robert W. Howe; Gregory J. Davis;. Volume 15. 2. 99--114
The landscape of landscape ecologists. . Volume 15. 3. 181--185
Nutrient flows and land use change in a rural catchment: a modelling approach. Ülo Mander; Ain Kull; Valdo Kuusemets;. Volume 15. 3. 187--199
Biotope patterns and abundance of meadow plant species in a Norwegian rural landscape. Ann Norderhaug; Margareta Ihse; Oddvar Pedersen;. Volume 15. 3. 201--218
Additive partitioning of plant species diversity in an agricultural mosaic landscape. Helene H. Wagner; Otto Wildi; Klaus C. Ewald;. Volume 15. 3. 219--227
Dispersal of woody plants in forest edges and hedgerows in a Southern Swedish agricultural area: the role of site and landscape structure. Ingrid L. Sarlöv Herlin; Gareth L.A. Fry;. Volume 15. 3. 229--242
Competing land use in the reserve site selection problem. Frank van Langevelde; Alex Schotman; Frits Claassen; Gerard Sparenburg;. Volume 15. 3. 243--256
Changing patterns in the urbanized countryside of Western Europe. Marc Antrop;. Volume 15. 3. 257--270
Agri-environmental schemes and the European agricultural landscapes: the role of indicators as valuing tools for evaluation. Juan J. Oñate; Erling Andersen; Begoña Peco; Jørgen Primdahl;. Volume 15. 3. 271--280
Landscape conflicts: preferences, identities and rights. John O'Neill; Mary Walsh;. Volume 15. 3. 281--289
Aspects of landscape or nature quality. Finn Arler;. Volume 15. 3. 291--302
Interdisciplinarity, landscape ecology and the `Transformation of Agricultural Landscapes'. Michael R. Moss;. Volume 15. 3. 303--311
A novel use of the lacunarity index to discern landscape function. Nancy E. McIntyre; John A. Wiens;. Volume 15. 4. 313--321
The influence of corridors on the movement behavior of individual Peromyscus polionotus in experimental landscapes. Brent J. Danielson; Michael W. Hubbard;. Volume 15. 4. 323--331
Resource patch array use by two squirrel species in an agricultural landscape. Jason T. Fisher; Gray Merriam;. Volume 15. 4. 333--338
Land-use and land-cover dynamics in response to changes in climatic, biological and socio-political forces: the case of southwestern Ethiopia. Robin S. Reid; Russell L. Kruska; Nyawira Muthui; Andualem Taye; Sara Wotton; Cathleen J. Wilson; Woudyalew Mulatu;. Volume 15. 4. 339--355
Path analysis of spatial predictors of front-yard landscape in an anthropogenic environment. Jean Zmyslony; Daniel Gagnon;. Volume 15. 4. 357--371
Fire-driven dynamic mosaics in the Great Victoria Desert, Australia – I. Fire geometry. Daniel T. Haydon; John K. Friar; Eric R. Pianka;. Volume 15. 4. 373--382
A frame-based spatially explicit model of subarctic vegetation response to climatic change: comparison with a point model. T. Scott Rupp; Anthony M. Starfield; F. Stuart Chapin;. Volume 15. 4. 383--400
Spider communities as tools in monitoring reclaimed limestone quarry landforms. C. Philip Wheater; W. Rod Cullen; James R. Bell;. Volume 15. 5. 401--406
Fire-driven dynamic mosaics in the Great Victoria Desert, Australia – II. A spatial and temporal landscape model. Daniel T. Haydon; John K. Friar; Eric R. Pianka;. Volume 15. 5. 407--423
Spatial variability in soil nitrogen dynamics after prescribed burning in Ohio mixed-oak forests. Ralph E.J. Boerner; Sherri Jeakins Morris; Elaine Kennedy Sutherland; Todd F. Hutchinson;. Volume 15. 5. 425--439
Alternative spatial resolutions and estimation of carbon flux over a managed forest landscape in Western Oregon. David P. Turner; Warren B. Cohen; Robert E. Kennedy;. Volume 15. 5. 441--452
Issues related to the detection of boundaries. M.-J. Fortin; R.J. Olson; S. Ferson; L. Iverson; C. Hunsaker; G. Edwards; D. Levine; K. Butera; V. Klemas;. Volume 15. 5. 453--466
Lacunarity analysis of spatial pattern: A comparison. M.R.T. Dale;. Volume 15. 5. 467--478
Spectral representation of neutral landscapes. Timothy H. Keitt;. Volume 15. 5. 479--494
A geography of ecosystem vulnerability. James D. Wickham; Robert V. O'Neill; K.Bruce Jones;. Volume 15. 6. 495--504
Spatial patterns of primary productivity in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem. A.J. Hansen; J.J. Rotella; M.P.V. Kraska; D. Brown;. Volume 15. 6. 505--522
Comparing the landscape level perceptual abilities of forest sciurids in fragmented agricultural landscapes*. Patrick A. Zollner;. Volume 15. 6. 523--533
Bush cover and range condition assessments in relation to landscape and grazing in southern Ethiopia. Gufu Oba; Eric Post; P.O. Syvertsen; N.C. Stenseth;. Volume 15. 6. 535--546
Landscape effects mediate breeding bird abundance in midwestern forests. Christine A. Howell; Steven C. Latta; Therese M. Donovan; Paul A. Porneluzi; Geoffrey R. Parks; John Faaborg;. Volume 15. 6. 547--562
Streambed landscapes: evidence that stream invertebrates respond to the type and spatial arrangement of patches. Margaret A. Palmer; Christopher M. Swan; Karen Nelson; Pamela Silver; Rachel Alvestad;. Volume 15. 6. 563--576
Evaluating the effects of changes in landscape structure on soil erosion by water and tillage. Kristof Van Oost; Gerard Govers; Phillipe Desmet;. Volume 15. 6. 577--589
An aggregation index (AI) to quantify spatial patterns of landscapes. Hong S. He; Barry E. DeZonia; David J. Mladenoff;. Volume 15. 7. 591--601
Forest gradient response in Sierran landscapes: the physical template. Dean L. Urban; Carol Miller; Patrick N. Halpin; Nathan L. Stephenson;. Volume 15. 7. 603--620
Using landscape metrics to model source habitat for Neotropical migrants in the midwestern U.S.. Peter T. Fauth; Eric J. Gustafson; Kerry N. Rabenold;. Volume 15. 7. 621--631
How should we measure landscape connectivity?. Lutz Tischendorf; Lenore Fahrig;. Volume 15. 7. 633--641
Rates and patterns of landscape change in the Central Sikhote-alin Mountains, Russian Far East. Sam A. Cushman; David O. Wallin;. Volume 15. 7. 643--659
Landscape patterns simulation with a modified random clusters method. Santiago Saura; Javier Martínez-Millán;. Volume 15. 7. 661--678
Physico-chemical heterogeneity in a glacial riverscape. Florian Malard; Klement Tockner; J.V. Ward;. Volume 15. 8. 679--695
Rapid sampling of plant species composition for assessing vegetation patterns in rugged terrain. Ross K. Meentemeyer; Aaron Moody;. Volume 15. 8. 697--711
The effects of future urban development on habitat fragmentation in the Santa Monica Mountains. Jennifer J. Swenson; Janet Franklin;. Volume 15. 8. 713--730
Site fidelity of female caribou at multiple spatial scales. James A. Schaefer; Carita M. Bergman; Stuart N. Luttich;. Volume 15. 8. 731--739
Testing methods to produce landscape-scale presettlement vegetation maps from the U.S. public land survey records. Kristen L. Manies; David J. Mladenoff;. Volume 15. 8. 741--754
Effects of wind turbines and other physical elements on field utilization by pink-footed geese (Anser brachyrhynchus): A landscape perspective. JesperKyed Larsen; Jesper Madsen;. Volume 15. 8. 755--764
The costs of multiple patch use by birds. Shelley A. Hinsley;. Volume 15. 8. 765--775
Note from the Editor-in-Chief. David J. Mladenoff;. Volume 16. 1. 1
Erratum. . Volume 16. 1. 87
Respective roles of recent hedges and forest patch remnants in the maintenance of ground-beetle (Coleoptera: Carabidae) diversity in an agricultural landscape. Elisabeth Fournier; Michel Loreau;. Volume 16. 1. 17--32
Changes to the landscape pattern of coastal North Carolina wetlands under the Clean Water Act, 1984–1992. Nina M. Kelly;. Volume 16. 1. 3--16
The ecology of urban landscapes: modeling housing starts as a density-dependent colonization process. William F. Fagan; Eli Meir; Steven S. Carroll; Jianguo Wu;. Volume 16. 1. 33--39
Analysis of land-cover transitions based on 17th and 18th century cadastral maps and aerial photographs. Sara A.O. Cousins;. Volume 16. 1. 41--54
A landscape-level assessment of understory diversity in upland forests of North-Central Wisconsin, USA. Beth A. Sweeney; James E. Cook;. Volume 16. 1. 55--69
A comparison of satellite data and landscape variables in predicting bird species occurrences in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, USA. Erika Hasler Saveraid; Diane M. Debinski; Kelly Kindscher; Mark E. Jakubauskas;. Volume 16. 1. 71--83
Acknowledgments to Reviewers. . Volume 16. 1. 85--86
Current velocity and spatial scale as determinants of the distribution and abundance of two rheophilic herbivorous insects. Todd A. Wellnitz; N. LeRoy Poff; Gabriel Cosyleón; Brett Steury;. Volume 16. 2. 111--120
Quantifying habitat specificity to assess the contribution of a patch to species richness at a landscape scale. Helene H. Wagner; Peter J. Edwards;. Volume 16. 2. 121--131
The effects of a vegetational corridor on the abundance and dispersal of insect biodiversity within a northern California organic vineyard. Clara I. Nicholls; Michael Parrella; Miguel A. Altieri;. Volume 16. 2. 133--146
The role of landscape structure in species richness distribution of birds, amphibians, reptiles and lepidopterans in Mediterranean landscapes. José A. Atauri; José V. de Lucio;. Volume 16. 2. 147--159
The effect of breeding-habitat patch size on bird population density. Cristián F. Estades;. Volume 16. 2. 161--173
Landscape changes and breeding bird assemblages in northwestern Portugal: the role of fire. Francisco Moreira; Paulo G. Ferreira; Francisco C. Rego; Stephen Bunting;. Volume 16. 2. 175--187
Spatial patterns of sand pine invasion into longleaf pine forests in the Florida Panhandle. Deanna H. McCay;. Volume 16. 2. 89--98
Spatial pattern of coniferous and deciduous forest patches in an Eastern North America agricultural landscape: the influence of land use and physical attributes. Daiyuan Pan; Gérald Domon; Danielle Marceau; André Bouchard;. Volume 16. 2. 99--110
Resident bird species in urban forest remnants; landscape and habitat perspectives. Ulla M. Mörtberg;. Volume 16. 3. 193--203
Central-place analysis and modeling of landscape-scale resource use in an East African agropastoral system. Peter B. Coppolillo;. Volume 16. 3. 205--219
Functional and structural landscape indicators of intensification, resilience and resistance in agroecosystems in southern Argentina based on remotely sensed data. Jorge Ares; Mónica Bertiller; Héctor del Valle;. Volume 16. 3. 221--234
Can landscape indices predict ecological processes consistently?. Lutz Tischendorf;. Volume 16. 3. 235--254
Landscape structure influences continental distribution of hantavirus in deer mice. Jean P. Langlois; Lenore Fahrig; Gray Merriam; Harvey Artsob;. Volume 16. 3. 255--266
Dispersion of kangaroo rat mounds at multiple scales in New Mexico, USA. Robert L. Schooley; John A. Wiens;. Volume 16. 3. 267--277
Applying a variable-shape spatial filter to map relative abundance of manatees (Trichechus manatus latirostris). Richard O. Flamm; Leslie I. Ward; Bradley L. Weigle;. Volume 16. 3. 279--288
Scaling simulation models for spatially heterogeneous ecosystems with diffusive transportation. Qiong Gao; Mei Yu; Xiusheng Yang; Jianguo Wu;. Volume 16. 4. 289--300
Predicting nutrient and sediment loadings to streams from landscape metrics: A multiple watershed study from the United States Mid-Atlantic Region. K. Bruce Jones; Anne C. Neale; Maliha S. Nash; Rick D. Van Remortel; James D. Wickham; Kurt H. Riitters; Robert V. O'Neill;. Volume 16. 4. 301--312
Attributes of blowdown patches from a severe wind event in the Southern Rocky Mountains, USA. Jeremiah D. Lindemann; William L. Baker;. Volume 16. 4. 313--325
Cumulative effects of roads and logging on landscape structure in the San Juan Mountains, Colorado (USA). Kevin McGarigal; William H. Romme; Michele Crist; Ed Roworth;. Volume 16. 4. 327--349
Arizona pine (Pinus arizonica) stand dynamics: local and regional factors in a fire-prone madrean gallery forest of Southeast Arizona, USA. Andrew M. Barton; Thomas W. Swetnam; Christopher H. Baisan;. Volume 16. 4. 351--369
Forest fragmentation in the Southern Rocky Mountains, by R.F. Noss. Reed F. Noss;. Volume 16. 4. 371--372
Detection of edaphic discontinuities with ground-penetrating radar and electromagnetic induction. James C. Stroh; Steve Archer; James A. Doolittle; Larry Wilding;. Volume 16. 5. 377--390
Can place names be used as indicators of landscape changes? Application to the Doñana Natural Park (Spain). Arturo Sousa; Pablo García-Murillo;. Volume 16. 5. 391--406
Predicting grey squirrel expansion in North Italy: a spatially explicit modelling approach. P.W.W. Lurz; S.P. Rushton; L.A. Wauters; S. Bertolino; I. Currado; P. Mazzoglio; M.D.F. Shirley;. Volume 16. 5. 407--420
Environmental, historical, and contextual determinants of vegetation cover: a landscape perspective. Sylvie de Blois; Gérald Domon; André Bouchard;. Volume 16. 5. 421--436
Impact of landscape features on spring phenological phases of maple and bird cherry in Estonia. R. Ahas; A. Aasa;. Volume 16. 5. 437--451
The spatial distribution of diversity between disparate taxa: Spatial correspondence between mammals and ants across South Florida, USA. Craig R. Allen; L.G. Pearlstine; D.P. Wojcik; W.M. Kitchens;. Volume 16. 5. 453--464
A multiscale framework for landscape analysis: Object-specific analysis and upscaling. G.J. Hay; D.J. Marceau; P. Dubé; A. Bouchard;. Volume 16. 6. 471--490
Consequences of less intensive farming on the landscape: an example of vegetation dominance by Chaerophyllum aureum in the meadows of a Pyrenean valley in France. Danièle Magda; Jean-François Gonnet;. Volume 16. 6. 491--500
Forest reconstruction and past climatic estimates for a deforested region of south-eastern New Zealand. G.M.J. Hall; M.S. McGlone;. Volume 16. 6. 501--521
Fuzzy k-means classification of topo-climatic data as an aid to forest mapping in the Greater Yellowstone Area, USA. Peter A. Burrough; John P. Wilson; Pauline F.M. van Gaans; Andrew J. Hansen;. Volume 16. 6. 523--546
Continental-scale interactions with temporary resources may explain the paradox of large populations of desert waterbirds in Australia. D.A. Roshier; A.I. Robertson; R.T. Kingsford; D.G. Green;. Volume 16. 6. 547--556
Temporal (1958–1995) pattern of change in a cultural landscape of northwestern Portugal: implications for fire occurrence. Francisco Moreira; Francisco C. Rego; Paulo G. Ferreira;. Volume 16. 6. 557--567
Aspen persistence near the National Elk Refuge and Gros Ventre Valley elk feedgrounds of Wyoming, USA. David T. Barnett; Thomas J. Stohlgren;. Volume 16. 6. 569--580
Analysis of landscape patterns in coastal wetlands of Galveston Bay, Texas (USA). Amy J. Liu; Guy N. Cameron;. Volume 16. 7. 581--595
Characterizing watershed-delineated landscapes in Pennsylvania using conditional entropy profiles. Glen D. Johnson; Wayne L. Myers; Ganapati P. Patil; Charles Taillie;. Volume 16. 7. 597--610
Analysis and simulation of land-use change in the central Arizona – Phoenix region, USA. G. Darrel Jenerette; Jianguo Wu;. Volume 16. 7. 611--626
Forest fragmentation in Loudoun County, Virginia, USA evaluated with multitemporal Landsat imagery. Douglas O. Fuller;. Volume 16. 7. 627--642
Measuring urban habitat fragmentation: an example from the Black Country, UK. Christopher H. Young; Peter J. Jarvis;. Volume 16. 7. 643--658
Road and railway verges serve as dispersal corridors for grassland plants. Päivi M. Tikka; Harri Högmander; Piia S. Koski;. Volume 16. 7. 659--666
The Mediterranean vegetation: what if the atmospheric CO2 increased?. R. Cheddadi; J. Guiot; D. Jolly;. Volume 16. 7. 667--675
Landscape cover type and pattern dynamics in fragmented southern Great Plains grasslands, USA. Bryan R. Coppedge; David M. Engle; Samuel D. Fuhlendorf; Ronald E. Masters; Mark S. Gregory;. Volume 16. 8. 677--690
Harvesting of leaf-hay shaped the Swedish landscape. Håkan Slotte;. Volume 16. 8. 691--702
The change of a satoyama landscape and its causality in Kamiseya, Kyoto Prefecture, Japan between 1970 and 1995. Katsue Fukamachi; Hirokazu Oku; Tohru Nakashizuka;. Volume 16. 8. 703--717
Forestry expansion and land-use patterns in the Nelson Region, New Zealand. Keiko Nagashima; Roger Sands; A.G.D. Whyte; E.M. Bilek; Nobukazu Nakagoshi;. Volume 16. 8. 719--729
The effects of timber harvesting on the structure and composition of adjacent old-growth coast redwood forest, California, USA. William H. Russell; Cristina Jones;. Volume 16. 8. 731--741
Land ownership and other landscape-level effects on biodiversity in southern Ontario’s Niagara Escarpment Biosphere Reserve, Canada. Jon Lovett-Doust; Kathryn Kuntz;. Volume 16. 8. 743--755
Landscape Ecology – towards a unified discipline?. Olaf Bastian;. Volume 16. 8. 757--766
Bridging the gap between ecology and spatial planning in landscape ecology. Paul Opdam; Ruud Foppen; Claire Vos;. Volume 16. 8. 767--779
Introduction. Bas Pedroli; Bert Harms;. Volume 17. 0. 1--3
Grassland ecotopes of the upper Meuse as references for habitats and biodiversity restoration: A synthesis. F. Grevilliot; S. Muller;. Volume 17. 0. 19--33
Landscape ecology: a framework for integrating pattern and process in river corridors. J. V. Ward; Florian Malard; Klement Tockner;. Volume 17. 0. 35--45
The formation of natural levees as a disturbance process significant to the conservation of riverine pastures. H. P. Wolfert; P. W. F. M. Hommel; A. H. Prins; M. H. Stam;. Volume 17. 0. 47--57
Setting targets in strategies for river restoration. Bas Pedroli; Geert de Blust; Kris van Looy; Sabine van Rooij;. Volume 17. 0. 5--18
Nutrient flows and management of a small watershed. Valdo Kuusemets; Ülo Mander;. Volume 17. 0. 59--68
A decision support system for restoration planning of stream valley ecosystems. N. M. Pieterse; A. W. M. Verkroost; M. Wassen; H. Olde Venterink; C. Kwakernaak;. Volume 17. 0. 69--81
Ecological land evaluation for nature redevelopment in river areas. Nobukazu Nakagoshi; Toshiaki Kondo;. Volume 17. 0. 83--93
An investigation of water and matter balance on the meso-landscape scale: A hierarchical approach for landscape research. Uta Steinhardt; Martin Volk;. Volume 17. 1. 1--12
Scaling patterns of biomass and soil properties: an empirical analysis. David K. Oline; Michael C. Grant;. Volume 17. 1. 13--26
Spatio-temporal modelling of broad scale heterogeneity in soil moisture content: a basis for an ecologically meaningful classification of soil landscapes. Alessandro Gimona; Richard V. Birnie;. Volume 17. 1. 27--41
Ecological relationships between landscape change and plant guilds in depressional wetlands. Ricardo D. Lopez; Craig B. Davis; M. Siobhan Fennessy;. Volume 17. 1. 43--56
Population dynamics and habitat connectivity affecting the spatial spread of populations – a simulation study. Dagmar Söndgerath; Boris Schröder;. Volume 17. 1. 57--70
Spatial analysis of selected soil attributes across an alpine topographic/snow gradient. M. Iggy Litaor; T.R. Seastedt; D.A. Walker;. Volume 17. 1. 71--85
A mathematical comment on the formulae for the aggregation index and the shape index. Jan Bogaert; Ranga B. Myneni; Yuri Knyazikhin;. Volume 17. 1. 87--90
Impact of data integration technique on historical land-use/land-cover change: Comparing historical maps with remote sensing data in the Belgian Ardennes. C.C. Petit; E.F. Lambin;. Volume 17. 2. 117--132
Recent forest cover type transitions and landscape structural changes in northeast Minnesota, USA. Peter T. Wolter; Mark A. White;. Volume 17. 2. 133--155
A leakiness index for assessing landscape function using remote sensing. John A. Ludwig; Robert W. Eager; Gary N. Bastin; Vanessa H. Chewings; Adam C. Liedloff;. Volume 17. 2. 157--171
Prediction of the spatial distribution and relative abundance of ground-dwelling mammals using remote sensing imagery and simulation models. N.C. Coops; P.C. Catling;. Volume 17. 2. 173--188
The Use of Population Viability Analyses in Conser-vation Planning. In: Per Sjögren-Gulve and Tobjörn Ebenhardv use of novel dichotomy that is of particular interest to the landscape ecologist: whether the PVA is spatially. Mark Schwartz;. Volume 17. 2. 189--190
Bryn Green and Willem Vos, Threatened Land-scapes: Conserving Cultural Environments. Laura R. Musacchio;. Volume 17. 2. 190--191
Erratum. . Volume 17. 2. 193--194
Multi-scale landscape and seascape patterns associated with marbled murrelet nesting areas on the U.S. west coast. Carolyn B. Meyer; Sherri L. Miller; C. John Ralph;. Volume 17. 2. 95--115
Prediction of total and rare plant species richness in agricultural landscapes from satellite images and topographic data. Miska Luoto; Tuuli Toivonen; Risto K. Heikkinen;. Volume 17. 3. 195--217
Gap-crossing decisions by forest birds: an empirical basis for parameterizing spatially-explicit, individual-based models. Marc Bélisle; André Desrochers;. Volume 17. 3. 219--231
Landscape patterns as habitat predictors: building and testing models for cavity-nesting birds in the Uinta Mountains of Utah, USA. Joshua J. Lawler; Thomas C. Edwards;. Volume 17. 3. 233--245
Effects of forest regeneration on songbird movements in a managed forest landscape of Alberta, Canada. Isabelle Robichaud; Marc-André Villard; Craig S. Machtans;. Volume 17. 3. 247--262
Plant strategies and agricultural landscapes: survival in spatially and temporally fragmented habitat. W. Geertsema; P. Opdam; M.J. Kropff;. Volume 17. 3. 263--279
Accuracy of fractal dimension estimates for small samples of ecological distributions. Athanasios S. Kallimanis; Stefanos P. Sgardelis; John M. Halley;. Volume 17. 3. 281--297
Analyzing a forest conversion history database to explore the spatial and temporal characteristics of land cover change in Guatemala's Maya Biosphere Reserve. Daniel J. Hayes; Steven A. Sader; Norman B. Schwartz;. Volume 17. 4. 299--314
Processes of environmental degradation and opportunities for rehabilitation in Adwa, Northern Ethiopia. Enrico Feoli; Laura Gallizia Vuerich; Zerihun Woldu;. Volume 17. 4. 315--325
A gradient analysis of urban landscape pattern: a case study from the Phoenix metropolitan region, Arizona, USA. Matthew Luck; Jianguo Wu;. Volume 17. 4. 327--339
Long-term changes in willow spatial distribution on the elk winter range of Rocky Mountain National Park (USA). H. Raul Peinetti; Mohammed A. Kalkhan; Michael B. Coughenour;. Volume 17. 4. 341--354
Key issues and research priorities in landscape ecology: An idiosyncratic synthesis. Jianguo Wu; Richard Hobbs;. Volume 17. 4. 355--365
The use of herders’ accounts to map livestock activities across agropastoral landscapes in Semi-Arid Africa. Matthew D. Turner; Pierre Hiernaux;. Volume 17. 5. 367--385
Carabid beetle assemblages (Coleoptera, Carabidae) across urban-rural gradients: an international comparison. Jari Niemelä; D. Johan Kotze; Stephen Venn; Lyubomir Penev; Ivailo Stoyanov; John Spence; Dustin Hartley; Enrique Montes de Oca;. Volume 17. 5. 387--401
Changes in mixed deciduous forests of boreal Sweden 1866–1999 based on interpretation of historical records. Anna-Lena Axelsson; Lars Östlund; Erik Hellberg;. Volume 17. 5. 403--418
Landscape dynamics and equilibrium in areas of slash-and-burn agriculture with short and long fallow period (Bragantina region, NE Brazilian Amazon). Jean Paul Metzger;. Volume 17. 5. 419--431
Statistical models of landscape pattern metrics, with applications to regional scale dynamic forest simulations. Steve Cumming; Pierre Vervier;. Volume 17. 5. 433--444
Use of fourier transforms to define landscape scales of analysis for disturbances: a case study of thinned and unthinned forest stands. J.E. Lundquist; R.A. Sommerfeld;. Volume 17. 5. 445--454
Rate and pattern of forest disturbance in the Klamath-Siskiyou ecoregion, USA between 1972 and 1992. Nancy L. Staus; James R. Strittholt; Dominick A. DellaSala; Rob Robinson;. Volume 17. 5. 455--470
Changes in anthropogenic impervious surfaces, precipitation and daily streamflow discharge: a historical perspective in a mid-atlantic subwatershed. David B. Jennings; S. Taylor Jarnagin;. Volume 17. 5. 471--489
Agriculture intensification and forest fragmentation in the St. Lawrence valley, Québec, Canada. Luc Bélanger; Marcelle Grenier;. Volume 17. 6. 495--507
Boundary effects on dispersal between habitat patches by forest birds (Parus major, P. caeruleus). Erik Matthysen;. Volume 17. 6. 509--515
The influence of management history and habitat on plant species richness in a rural hemiboreal landscape, Sweden. Sara A.O. Cousins; Ove Eriksson;. Volume 17. 6. 517--529
Landscape diversity in a conservation area and commercial and communal rangeland in Xeric Succulent Thicket, South Africa. C. Fabricius; A.R. Palmer; M. Burger;. Volume 17. 6. 531--537
Landscape-scale controls over 20th century fire occurrence in two large Rocky Mountain (USA) wilderness areas. Matthew G. Rollins; Penelope Morgan; Thomas Swetnam;. Volume 17. 6. 539--557
Scale dependence of tree abundance and richness in a tropical rain forest, Malaysia. Fangliang He; James V. LaFrankie; Bo Song;. Volume 17. 6. 559--568
The influence of research scale on bald eagle habitat selection along the lower Hudson River, New York (USA). Craig M. Thompson; Kevin McGarigal;. Volume 17. 6. 569--586
Microphytic crusts, shrub patches and water harvesting in the Negev Desert: the Shikim system. David J. Eldridge; Eli Zaady; Moshe Shachak;. Volume 17. 6. 587--597
Can we manage tropical landscapes? – an answer from the Caribbean perspective. Ariel E. Lugo;. Volume 17. 7. 601--615
Multi-scale effects of habitat loss and fragmentation on lesser prairie-chicken populations of the US Southern Great Plains. Samuel D. Fuhlendorf; Alan J.W. Woodward; David M. Leslie; John S. Shackford;. Volume 17. 7. 617--628
Effects of corridors on home range sizes and interpatch movements of three small mammal species. Karen E. Mabry; Gary W. Barrett;. Volume 17. 7. 629--636
Hierarchical, Multi-scale decomposition of species-environment relationships. Samuel A. Cushman; Kevin McGarigal;. Volume 17. 7. 637--646
The influences of patch shape and boundary contrast on insect response to fragmentation in California grasslands. Sharon K. Collinge; Todd M. Palmer;. Volume 17. 7. 647--656
Landscape patch shape complexity as an effective measure for plant species richness in rural landscapes. Dietmar Moser; Harald G. Zechmeister; Christoph Plutzar; Norbert Sauberer; Thomas Wrbka; Georg Grabherr;. Volume 17. 7. 657--669
Spatial dependence and the relationship of soil organic carbon and soil moisture in the Luquillo Experimental Forest, Puerto Rico. Hongqing Wang; Charles A.S. Hall; Joseph D. Cornell; Myrna H.P. Hall;. Volume 17. 8. 671--684
Land ownership and landscape structure: a spatial analysis of sixty-six Oregon (USA) Coast Range watersheds. Brooks J. Stanfield; John C. Bliss; Thomas A. Spies;. Volume 17. 8. 685--697
Estimating the consequences of habitat fragmentation on extinction risk in dynamic landscapes. Weidong Gu; Raimo Heikkilä; Ilkka Hanski;. Volume 17. 8. 699--710
Testing landscape metrics as indicators of habitat loss and fragmentation in continuous eucalypt forests (Queensland, Australia). Clive A. McAlpine; Teresa J. Eyre;. Volume 17. 8. 711--728
Landscape pattern in topographically complex landscapes: issues and techniques for analysis. Brigitte Dorner; Ken Lertzman; Joseph Fall;. Volume 17. 8. 729--743
Wildfires and landscape patterns in the Eastern Iberian Peninsula. Francisco Lloret; Eduard Calvo; Xavier Pons; Ricardo Díaz-Delgado;. Volume 17. 8. 745--759
Empirical patterns of the effects of changing scale on landscape metrics. Jianguo Wu; Weijun Shen; Weizhong Sun; Paul T. Tueller;. Volume 17. 8. 761--782
The effect of short-term socio-economic and demographic change on landuse dynamics and its corresponding geomorphic response with relation to water erosion in a tropical mountainous catchment, Ecuador. Veerle Vanacker; Gerard Govers; Sandra Barros; Jean Poesen; Jozef Deckers;. Volume 18. 1. 1--15
Using patch isolation metrics to predict animal movement in binary landscapes. Darren J. Bender; Lutz Tischendorf; Lenore Fahrig;. Volume 18. 1. 17--39
Evaluation of patch isolation metrics in mosaic landscapes for specialist vs. generalist dispersers. Lutz Tischendorf; Darren J. Bender; Lenore Fahrig;. Volume 18. 1. 41--50
Estimates of dryland degradation in Argentina with Fourier signatures from low-altitude monochromatic images with high spatial resolution. Jorge O. Ares; Mónica B. Bertiller; Alejandro Bisigato;. Volume 18. 1. 51--63
Assessing the potential impacts of alternative landscape designs on amphibian population dynamics. H.L. Rustigian; M.V. Santelmann; N.H. Schumaker;. Volume 18. 1. 65--81
Characterizing the importance of habitat patches and corridors in maintaining the landscape connectivity of a Pholidoptera transsylvanica (Orthoptera) metapopulation. F. Jordán; A. Báldi; K.-M. Orci; I. Rácz; Z. Varga;. Volume 18. 1. 83--92
Erratum. . Volume 18. 2. 219
Landscape cohesion: an index for the conservation potential of landscapes for biodiversity. Paul Opdam; Jana Verboom; Rogier Pouwels;. Volume 18. 2. 113--126
Post-fire aspen seedling recruitment across the Yellowstone (USA) Landscape. Monica G. Turner; William H. Romme; Rebecca A. Reed; Gerald A. Tuskan;. Volume 18. 2. 127--140
Accessibility as a determinant of landscape transformation in western Honduras: linking pattern and process. Harini Nagendra; Jane Southworth; Catherine Tucker;. Volume 18. 2. 141--158
Land use, land cover changes and coastal lagoon surface reduction associated with urban growth in northwest Mexico. Arturo Ruiz-Luna; César A. Berlanga-Robles;. Volume 18. 2. 159--171
A landscape-geochemical approach in insular studies as exemplified by islets of the eastern Baltic Sea. Urve Ratas; Elle Puurmann; Jüri Roosaare; Reimo Rivis;. Volume 18. 2. 173--184
Effects of patch attributes, barriers, and distance between patches on the distribution of a rock-dwelling rodent ( Lagidium viscacia ). R. Susan Walker; Andrés J. Novaro; Lyn C. Branch;. Volume 18. 2. 185--192
Upstream-to-downstream changes in nutrient export risk. James D. Wickham; Timothy G. Wade; Kurt H. Riitters; R.V. O'Neill; Jonathan H. Smith; Elizabeth R. Smith; K.B. Jones; A.C. Neale;. Volume 18. 2. 193--206
Book review, Integrated Public Lands Management: A Coarse-Scale Economic Perspective. Joshua Lawler;. Volume 18. 2. 207--208
Book review, Early Forestry and Conservation in America. Louis R. Iverson;. Volume 18. 2. 208--210
Book review, Landscape Erosion and Evolution Modeling. Douglas M. Johnston;. Volume 18. 2. 210--211
Book review, Holistic: The Evolution of the Georgia Institute of Ecology. Jianguo Liu;. Volume 18. 2. 211--212
Book review, Tourism, Biodiversity and Information. John D. Waldron;. Volume 18. 2. 212--214
Book review, Lessons from Amazonia, The Ecology and Conservation of a Fragmented Forest. Anantha Prasad;. Volume 18. 2. 214--215
Book review, Spatial Modeling in Forest Ecology and Management: A Case Study. Falk Huettmann;. Volume 18. 2. 215--217
Birds in North American Great Lakes coastal wet meadows: is landscape context important?. Samuel K. Riffell; Brian E. Keas; Thomas M. Burton;. Volume 18. 2. 95--111
The implication of past and present landscape patterns for biodiversity research: introduction and overview. Isabelle Poudevigne; Jacques Baudry;. Volume 18. 3. 223--225
Origins of European biodiversity: palaeo-geographic signification of peat inception during the Holocene in the granitic eastern Massif Central (France). H. Cubizolle; A. Tourman; J. Argant; J. Porteret; C. Oberlin; K. Serieyssol;. Volume 18. 3. 227--238
Patterns of organisation in changing landscapes: implications for the management of biodiversity. Aude Ernoult; Fabrice Bureau; Isabelle Poudevigne;. Volume 18. 3. 239--251
Arthropod reaction to landscape and habitat features in agricultural landscapes. Ph. Jeanneret; B. Schüpbach; L. Pfiffner; Th. Walter;. Volume 18. 3. 253--263
Response of the small mammal community to changes in western French agricultural landscapes. Norma Millán de la Peña; Alain Butet; Yannick Delettre; Gilles Paillat; Philippe Morant; Laurence Le Du; Françoise Burel;. Volume 18. 3. 265--278
Metapopulation dynamics of the bog fritillary butterfly: comparison of demographic parameters and dispersal between a continuous and a highly fragmented landscape. Gwénaëlle Mennechez; Nicolas Schtickzelle; Michel Baguette;. Volume 18. 3. 279--291
The effects of agricultural fields and human settlements on the use of rivers by wildlife in the mid-Zambezi valley, Zimbabwe. Hervé Fritz; Sonia Saïd; Pierre-Cyril Renaud; Snoden Mutake; Craig Coid; François Monicat;. Volume 18. 3. 293--302
Temporal variability of connectivity in agricultural landscapes: do farming activities help?. Jacques Baudry; Françoise Burel; Stéphanie Aviron; Manuel Martin; Annie Ouin; Guillaume Pain; Claudine Thenail;. Volume 18. 3. 303--314
Modelling the effects of landscape pattern and grazing regimes on the persistence of plant species with high conservation value in grasslands in south-eastern Sweden. Sara A.O. Cousins; Sandra Lavorel; Ian Davies;. Volume 18. 3. 315--332
Metapopulation genetic structure and migration pathways in the land snail Helix aspersa: influence of landscape heterogeneity. Jean-François Arnaud;. Volume 18. 3. 333--346
Modeling the spatially dynamic distribution of humans in the Oregon (USA) Coast Range. Jeffrey D. Kline; David L. Azuma; Alissa Moses;. Volume 18. 4. 347--361
Evolving landscapes in the headwaters area of the Yellow River (China) and their ecological implications. Wang Genxu; Guo Xiaoyin; Shen Yongping; Cheng Guodong;. Volume 18. 4. 363--375
Effects of landscape structure and forest reserve location on old-growth forest bird species in Northern Finland. Lluís Brotons; Mikko Mönkkönen; Esa Huhta; Ari Nikula; Ari Rajasärkkä;. Volume 18. 4. 377--393
Quantitative assessment of the treescape and cityscape of Nanjing, China. Sophia S. Chen; C.Y. Jim;. Volume 18. 4. 395--412
Effects of landscape pattern on bird species distribution in the Mt. Lofty Ranges, South Australia. Michael I. Westphal; S.A. Field; A.J. Tyre; D. Paton; H.P. Possingham;. Volume 18. 4. 413--426
Historic range of variability in landscape structure in subalpine forests of the Greater Yellowstone Area, USA. Daniel B. Tinker; William H. Romme; Don G. Despain;. Volume 18. 4. 427--439
Effects of land-cover change on spatial pattern of forest communities in the Southern Appalachian Mountains (USA). Monica G. Turner; Scott M. Pearson; Paul Bolstad; David N. Wear;. Volume 18. 5. 449--464
Mixed-severity fire regime in a high-elevation forest of Grand Canyon, Arizona, USA. Peter Z. Fulé; Joseph E. Crouse; Thomas A. Heinlein; Margaret M. Moore; W. Wallace Covington; Greg Verkamp;. Volume 18. 5. 465--486
Predicting the spatial distribution of ground flora on large domains using a hierarchical Bayesian model. Mevin B. Hooten; David R. Larsen; Christopher K. Wikle;. Volume 18. 5. 487--502
Landscape planning for a rural ecosystem: case study of a resettlement area for residents from land submerged by the Three Gorges Reservoir, China. Zhongwei Guo; Xiangming Xiao; Yaling Gan; Yuejun Zheng;. Volume 18. 5. 503--512
Changes in large-scale patterns of plant biodiversity predicted from environmental economic scenarios. G.W.W. Wamelink; C.J.F. ter Braak; H.F. van Dobben;. Volume 18. 5. 513--527
Combining holding-level economic goals with spatial landscape-level goals in the planning of multiple ownership forestry. Mikko Kurttila; Timo Pukkala;. Volume 18. 5. 529--541
Siberian flying squirrel responses to high- and low-contrast forest edges. André Desrochers; Ilpo K. Hanski; Vesa Selonen;. Volume 18. 5. 543--552
Spatial pattern analysis of pre- and post-hurricane forest canopy structure in North Carolina, USA. Jeffry C. Boutet; John F. Weishampel;. Volume 18. 6. 553--559
Incorporating landscape elements into a connectivity measure: a case study for the Speckled wood butterfly (Pararge aegeria L.). J. Paul Chardon; Frank Adriaensen; Erik Matthysen;. Volume 18. 6. 561--573
Landscape changes and ecological studies in agricultural regions, Québec, Canada. Benoît Jobin; Jason Beaulieu; Marcelle Grenier; Luc Bélanger; Charles Maisonneuve; Daniel Bordage; Bernard Filion;. Volume 18. 6. 575--590
Aspen structure and variability in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, USA. Margot W. Kaye; Thomas J. Stohlgren; Dan Binkley;. Volume 18. 6. 591--603
Effect of landscape structure on anopheline mosquito density and diversity in northern Thailand: Implications for malaria transmission and control. Hans J. Overgaard; Barbara Ekbom; Wannapa Suwonkerd; Masahiro Takagi;. Volume 18. 6. 605--619
Effects of land ownership and landscape-level factors on rare-species richness in natural areas of southern Ontario, Canada. J. Lovett-Doust; M. Biernacki; R. Page; M. Chan; R. Natgunarajah; G. Timis;. Volume 18. 6. 621--633
Spatial theory in early conservation design: examples from Aldo Leopold’s work. Janet Silbernagel;. Volume 18. 7. 635--646
Influences of upland and riparian land use patterns on stream biotic integrity. C.D. Snyder; J.A. Young; R. Villella; D.P. Lemarié;. Volume 18. 7. 647--664
Some determinants of the spatio-temporal fire cycle in a mediterranean landscape (Corsica, France). Florent Mouillot; Jean-Pierre Ratte; Richard Joffre; Jose Manuel Moreno; Serge Rambal;. Volume 18. 7. 665--674
Effects of spatial scale and taxonomic group on partitioning of butterfly and bird diversity in the Great Basin, USA. Erica Fleishman; Christopher J. Betrus; Robert B. Blair;. Volume 18. 7. 675--685
Is landscape connectivity a dependent or independent variable?. Brett J. Goodwin;. Volume 18. 7. 687--699
Modeling multiscale effects of light limitations and edge-induced mortality on carbon stores in forest landscapes. Erica A. H. Smithwick; Mark E. Harmon; James B. Domingo;. Volume 18. 7. 701--721
Book review Review of Ecoregion-Based Design for Sustainability. Andrew Lister;. Volume 18. 8. 807
Historical range of variability in eastern Cascades forests, Washington, USA. James K. Agee;. Volume 18. 8. 725--740
The influence of sampling scheme and interpolation method on the power to detect spatial effects of forest birds in Ontario (Canada). Robert S. Rempel; Robert S. Kushneriuk;. Volume 18. 8. 741--757
Mapping alpine vegetation using vegetation observations and topographic attributes. Karin Pfeffer; Edzer J. Pebesma; Peter A. Burrough;. Volume 18. 8. 759--776
Land use and forest cover on private parcels in the Upper Midwest USA, 1970 to 1990. Daniel G. Brown;. Volume 18. 8. 777--790
Does matrix resistance influence Red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris L. 1758) distribution in an urban landscape?. Goedele Verbeylen; Luc De Bruyn; Frank Adriaensen; Erik Matthysen;. Volume 18. 8. 791--805
Errata. . Volume 18. 8. 809--829
List of Contributors. . Volume 18. 8. 831--832
Acknowledgments to Reviewers of 2003. . Volume 18. 8. 833--835
Aims and Scope. . Volume 18. 8. 837--838
Contents of Volume 18. . Volume 18. 8. 839--842
Book review: J. Morris, A. Bailey, R.K. Turner, and I.J. Bateman (eds.). . Volume 19. 1. 113--114
Book review: Frederick Steiner. . Volume 19. 1. 114--116
Aims and Scope. . Volume 19. 1. 117--118
Interpatch movements in spatially structured populations: a literature review. David R. Bowne; Michael A. Bowers;. Volume 19. 1. 1--20
Distribution of the Cinnabar moth Tyria jacobaeae L. at landscape scale: use of linear landscape structures in egg laying on larval hostplant exposures. Stefan Brunzel; Henning Elligsen; Robert Frankl;. Volume 19. 1. 21--27
Forest conservation and land development in Puerto Rico. E.H. Helmer;. Volume 19. 1. 29--40
Scale dependency of insect assemblages in response to landscape pattern. Guillem Chust; Joan Ll. Pretus; Danielle Ducrot; Daniel Ventura;. Volume 19. 1. 41--57
Detecting dominant landscape objects through multiple scales: An integration of object-specific methods and watershed segmentation. Ola Hall; Geoffrey J. Hay; André Bouchard; Danielle J. Marceau;. Volume 19. 1. 59--76
Projecting land use transitions at forest fringes in the Philippines at two spatial scales. Peter H. Verburg; A. Veldkamp;. Volume 19. 1. 77--98
Physical influences of landscape on a large-extent ecological disturbance: the northeastern North American ice storm of 1998. Andrew A. Millward; Clifford E. Kraft;. Volume 19. 1. 99--111
Confounding of patch quality and matrix effects in herbivore movement studies. Kyle J. Haynes; James T. Cronin;. Volume 19. 2. 119--124
Effects of changing scale on landscape pattern analysis: scaling relations. Jianguo Wu;. Volume 19. 2. 125--138
Variations in a regional fire regime related to vegetation type in San Diego County, California (USA). Michael L. Wells; John F. O'Leary; Janet Franklin; Joel Michaelsen; David E. McKinsey;. Volume 19. 2. 139--152
Anthropogenic influences on potential fire spread in a pyrogenic ecosystem of Florida, USA. Brean W. Duncan; Paul A. Schmalzer;. Volume 19. 2. 153--165
Ecotonal changes and altered tree spatial patterns in lower mixed-conifer forests, Grand Canyon National Park, Arizona, U.S.A.. Joy Nystrom Mast; Joy J. Wolf;. Volume 19. 2. 167--180
Landscape metrics with ecotones: pattern under uncertainty. C. Arnot; P.F. Fisher; R. Wadsworth; J. Wellens;. Volume 19. 2. 181--195
Effects of remote sensor spatial resolution and data aggregation on selected fragmentation indices. Santiago Saura;. Volume 19. 2. 197--209
Estimation and prediction of plant species richness in a mosaic landscape. Rainer Waldhardt; Dietmar Simmering; Annette Otte;. Volume 19. 2. 211--226
Emulating natural landscape disturbance in forest management – an introduction. Thomas R. Crow; Ajith H. Perera;. Volume 19. 3. 231--233
Human influence on the abundance and connectivity of high-risk fuels in mixed forests of northern Wisconsin, USA. Brian R. Sturtevant; Patrick A. Zollner; Eric J. Gustafson; David T. Cleland;. Volume 19. 3. 235--253
Sensitivity of landscape pattern indices to input data characteristics on real landscapes: implications for their use in natural disturbance emulation. David J. B. Baldwin; Kevin Weaver; Frank Schnekenburger; Ajith H. Perera;. Volume 19. 3. 255--271
Modelling land cover transitions: A solution to the problem of spatial dependence in data. Kevin Weaver; Ajith H. Perera;. Volume 19. 3. 273--289
Disturbance and landscape dynamics in the Chequamegon National Forest Wisconsin, USA, from 1972 to 2001. Mary K. Bresee; Jim Le Moine; Stephen Mather; Kimberley D. Brosofske; Jiquan Chen; Thomas R. Crow; John Rademacher;. Volume 19. 3. 291--309
Characterizing historical and modern fire regimes in Michigan (USA): A landscape ecosystem approach. David T. Cleland; Thomas R. Crow; Sari C. Saunders; Donald I. Dickmann; Ann L. Maclean; James K. Jordan; Richard L. Watson; Alyssa M. Sloan; Kimberley D. Brosofske;. Volume 19. 3. 311--325
Influence of forest management alternatives and land type on susceptibility to fire in northern Wisconsin, USA. Eric J. Gustafson; Patrick A. Zollner; Brian R. Sturtevant; Hong S. He; David J. Mladenoff;. Volume 19. 3. 327--341
Using normative scenarios in landscape ecology. Joan Iverson Nassauer; Robert C. Corry;. Volume 19. 4. 343--356
Assessing alternative futures for agriculture in Iowa, U.S.A.. M.V. Santelmann; D. White; K. Freemark; J.I. Nassauer; J.M. Eilers; K.B. Vaché; B.J. Danielson; R.C. Corry; M.E. Clark; S. Polasky; R.M. Cruse; J. Sifneos; H. Rustigian; C. Coiner; J. Wu; D. Debinski;. Volume 19. 4. 357--374
Evolving core-periphery interactions in a rapidly expanding urban landscape: The case of Beijing. Ye Qi; Mark Henderson; Ming Xu; Jin Chen; Peijun Shi; Chunyang He; G. William Skinner;. Volume 19. 4. 375--388
Use and misuse of landscape indices. Harbin Li; Jianguo Wu;. Volume 19. 4. 389--399
Simulated productivity of heterogeneous patches in Southern African savanna landscapes using a canopy productivity model. Kelly K. Caylor; Herman H. Shugart;. Volume 19. 4. 401--415
An empirical approach towards improved spatial estimates of soil moisture for vegetation analysis. Todd Lookingbill; Dean Urban;. Volume 19. 4. 417--433
Behavior of class-level landscape metrics across gradients of class aggregation and area. Maile C. Neel; Kevin McGarigal; Samuel A. Cushman;. Volume 19. 4. 435--455
Book Review: Quantitative Conservation biology: Theory and Practice of Population Viability analysis. . Volume 19. 4. 457--458
Book Review: Spatial Information for Land Use Management. Rachel Riemann;. Volume 19. 4. 459--460
Instructions for Authors. . Volume 19. 4. 461--462
Effects of area and isolation of woodland patches on herbaceous plant species richness across Great Britain. Sandrine Petit; Leila Griffiths; Simon S. Smart; Geoff M. Smith; Rick C. Stuart; Simon M. Wright;. Volume 19. 5. 463--471
Analysing land-cover changes in relation to environmental variables in Hesse, Germany. Elke Hietel; Rainer Waldhardt; Annette Otte;. Volume 19. 5. 473--489
Spatial analysis of roadside Acacia populations on a road network using the network K-function. Peter G. Spooner; Ian D. Lunt; Atsuyuki Okabe; Shino Shiode;. Volume 19. 5. 491--499
Local, landscape and regional factors structuring benthic macroinvertebrate assemblages in Swedish streams. Leonard Sandin; Richard K. Johnson;. Volume 19. 5. 501--514
The effects of habitat resolution on models of avian diversity and distributions: a comparison of two land-cover classifications. Joshua J. Lawler; Raymond. J. O’Connor; Carolyn T. Hunsaker; K. Bruce Jones; Thomas R. Loveland; Denis White;. Volume 19. 5. 515--530
Habitat factors related to wild rabbit conservation in an agricultural landscape. C. Calvete; R. Estrada; E. Angulo; S. Cabezas-Ruiz;. Volume 19. 5. 531--542
Variations in landscape patterns and vegetation cover between 1957 and 1994 in a semiarid Mediterranean ecosystem. C.L. Alodos; Y. Pueyo; O. Barrantes; J. Escós; L. Giner; A.B. Robles;. Volume 19. 5. 543--559
Book Review: Monitoring Ecosystems. Robert Potts;. Volume 19. 5. 561--562
Book Review: Road Ecology: Science and Solutions. George Hess;. Volume 19. 5. 563--565
Book Review: Development and Perspectives of Landscape Ecology. Dagmar Haase;. Volume 19. 5. 567--569
Comparing landscape scale vegetation dynamics following recent disturbance in climatically similar sites in California and the Mediterranean basin. Yohay Carmel; Curtis H. Flather;. Volume 19. 6. 573--590
Spatial association between forest heterogeneity and breeding territory boundaries of two forest songbirds. Véronique St-Louis; Marie-Josée Fortin; André Desrochers;. Volume 19. 6. 591--601
Pocono mesic till barrens in retreat: topography, fire and forest contagion effects. Keith R. Maurice; Joan M. Welch; Christopher P. Brown; Roger Earl Latham;. Volume 19. 6. 603--620
Soil C and N Content Under Evolving Landscapes in an Arid Inland River Basin of Northwest China. Wang Genxu; Yao Jinzhong; Luo Lin; Qian Ju;. Volume 19. 6. 621--629
A multi-scale assessment of human and environmental constraints on forest land cover change on the Oregon (USA) coast range. Michael C. Wimberly; Janet L. Ohmann;. Volume 19. 6. 631--646
Discrimination of native and exotic forest patterns through shape irregularity indices: An analysis in the landscapes of Galicia, Spain. Santiago Saura; Pedro Carballal;. Volume 19. 6. 647--662
Bird assemblages in forest fragments within Mediterranean mosaics created by wild fires. Lluís Brotons; Sergi Herrando; Jean-Louis Martin;. Volume 19. 6. 663--675
Estimating the ‘critical’ distance at which adjacent land-use degrades wetland water and sediment quality. Jeff E. Houlahan; C. Scott Findlay;. Volume 19. 6. 677--690
Implications of rescaling rules for multi-scaled habitat models. Jennifer M. Parody; Bruce T. Milne;. Volume 19. 6. 691--701
Book Review: Managing the Forest Matrix to Conserve Biodiversity. . Volume 19. 6. 703--704
Book Review: Putting Ecology Squarely in Sustainability. . Volume 19. 6. 705--707
Relationships of landscape, prey and agronomic variables to the abundance of generalist predators in cotton (Gossypium hirsutum) fields. Jarrad R. Prasifka; Kevin M. Heinz; Richard R. Minzenmayer;. Volume 19. 7. 709--717
Influence of agricultural landscape structure on a Southern High Plains, USA, amphibian assemblage. Matthew J. Gray; Loren M. Smith; Raquel I. Leyva;. Volume 19. 7. 719--729
Spatial patterns of fire occurrence in Catalonia, NE, Spain. Ricardo Díaz-Delgado; Francisco Lloret; Xavier Pons;. Volume 19. 7. 731--745
Changes in carabid beetle assemblages along an urbanisation gradient in the city of Debrecen, Hungary. T. Magura; B. Tóthmérész; T. Molnár;. Volume 19. 7. 747--759
Functional heterogeneity in resources within landscapes and herbivore population dynamics. Norman Owen-Smith;. Volume 19. 7. 761--771
Models to distinguish effects of landscape patterns and human population pressures associated with species loss in Canadian national parks. Yolanda F. Wiersma; Thomas D. Nudds; Donald H. Rivard;. Volume 19. 7. 773--786
Potential colonization of newly available tree-species habitat under climate change: An analysis for five eastern US species. Louis R. Iverson; M. W. Schwartz; Anantha M. Prasad;. Volume 19. 7. 787--799
Movements of cactus bugs: Patch transfers, matrix resistance, and edge permeability. Robert L. Schooley; John A. Wiens;. Volume 19. 7. 801--810
Book review. Brian Sturtevant;. Volume 19. 7. 811--812
Book review. Jonathan Bossenbroek;. Volume 19. 7. 813--814
Book review. Daniel J. Bain;. Volume 19. 7. 815--816
Introducing spatial grazing impacts into the prediction of moorland vegetation dynamics. S. C. F. Palmer; I. J. Gordon; A. J. Hester; R. J. Pakeman;. Volume 19. 8. 817--827
Introducing spatial grazing impacts into the prediction of moorland vegetation dynamics. S.C.F. Palmer; I.J. Gordon; A.J. Hester; R.J. Pakeman;. Volume 19. 8. 817--827
Quantifying functional connectivity: Experimental evidence for patch-specific resistance in the Natterjack toad (Bufo calamita). Virginie M. Stevens; Emmanuelle Polus; Renate A. Wesselingh; Nicolas Schtickzelle; Michel Baguette;. Volume 19. 8. 829--842
Quantifying functional connectivity: experimental evidence for patch-specific resistance in the Natterjack toad (Bufo calamita). Virginie M. Stevens; Emmanuelle Polus; Renate A. Wesselingh; Nicolas Schtickzelle; Michel Baguette;. Volume 19. 8. 829--842
Placing the pieces: Reconstructing the original property mosaic in a warrant and patent watershed. Daniel J. Bain; Grace S. Brush;. Volume 19. 8. 843--856
Placing the pieces: Reconstructing the original property mosaic in a warrant and patent watershed. Daniel J. Bain; Grace S. Brush;. Volume 19. 8. 843--856
Driving forces of landscape change - current and new directions. Matthias Bürgi; Anna M. Hersperger; Nina Schneeberger;. Volume 19. 8. 857--868
Driving forces of landscape change — current and new directions. Matthias Bürgi; Anna M. Hersperger; Nina Schneeberger;. Volume 19. 8. 857--868
Quantifying patch distribution at multiple spatial scales: Applications to wildlife-habitat models. Chris J. Johnson; Mark S. Boyce; Robert Mulders; Anne Gunn; Rob J. Gau; H. Dean Cluff; Ray L. Case;. Volume 19. 8. 869--882
Quantifying patch distribution at multiple spatial scales: applications to wildlife-habitat models. Chris J. Johnson; Mark S. Boyce; Robert Mulders; Anne Gunn; Rob J. Gau; H. Dean Cluff; Ray L. Case;. Volume 19. 8. 869--882
Evidence of Hierarchical Patch Dynamics in an East African Savanna?. Lindsey Gillson;. Volume 19. 8. 883--894
Evidence of Hierarchical Patch Dynamics in an East African savanna?. Lindsey Gillson;. Volume 19. 8. 883--894
Using traffic flow theory to model traffic mortality in mammals. Frank van Langevelde; Catharinus F. Jaarsma;. Volume 19. 8. 895--907
Using traffic flow theory to model traffic mortality in mammals. Frank van Langevelde; Catharinus F. Jaarsma;. Volume 19. 8. 895--907
Book review. Ric Lopez;. Volume 19. 8. 909--910
Book Review: Wetland Design, Principles and Practices for Landscape Architects and Land-Use Planners. Ric Lopez;. Volume 19. 8. 909--910
Book review. Tania Schoennagel;. Volume 19. 8. 911--912
Book Review: Integrating Landscape Ecology into Natural Resource Management. Tania Schoennagel;. Volume 19. 8. 911--912
Long-term forest dynamic after land abandonment in a fire prone Mediterranean landscape (central Corsica, France). Florent Mouillot; Jean-Pierre Ratte; Richard Joffre; David Mouillot; and Serge Rambal;. Volume 20. 1. 101--112
A method for the use of landscape metrics in freshwater research and management. Faith R. Kearns; N. Maggi Kelly; James L. Carter; Vincent H. Resh;. Volume 20. 1. 113--125
Research article Canopy dynamics and human caused disturbance on a semi-arid landscape in the Rocky Mountains, USA. Daniel J. Manier; N. Thompson. Hobbs; David M. Theobald; Robin M. Reich; Mohammed A. Kalkhan; Mark R. Campbell;. Volume 20. 1. 1--17
The influence of forest harvesting on landscape spatial patterns and old-growth-forest fragmentation in southeast British Columbia. Robert G. D’eon; Susan M. Glenn;. Volume 20. 1. 19--33
Post-storm surveys reveal large-scale spatial patterns and influences of site factors, forest structure and diversity in endemic bark-beetle populations. M. Gilbert; L.-M. Nageleisen; A. Franklin; J.-C. Gregoire;. Volume 20. 1. 35--49
Multiscale control of vegetation patterns: the case of Doñana (SW Spain). José Carlos Muñoz-Reinoso; Francisco García Novo;. Volume 20. 1. 51--61
Landscape characteristics of Rhizophora mangle forests and propagule deposition in coastal environments of Florida (USA). Raja Sengupta; Beth Middleton; Chen Yan; Michelle Zuro; Heidi Hartman;. Volume 20. 1. 63--72
The protean relationship between boreal forest landscape structure and red squirrel distribution at multiple spatial scales. Jason T. Fisher; Stan Boutin; and Susan J. Hannon;. Volume 20. 1. 73--82
Dispersal behaviour in fragmented landscapes: Deriving a practical formula for patch accessibility. Simone K. Heinz; Larissa Conradt; Christian Wissel; and Karin Frank;. Volume 20. 1. 83--99
Edge avoidance and movement of the butterfly Parnassius smintheus in matrix and non-matrix habitat. J. Andrew Ross; Stephen F. Matter; Jens Roland;. Volume 20. 2. 127--135
A simple method for estimating potential relative radiation (PRR) for landscape-scale vegetation analysis. Kenneth B. Pierce; Todd Lookingbill; Dean Urban;. Volume 20. 2. 137--147
Analysis of land-use change in a sector of Upper Franconia (Bavaria, Germany) since 1850 using land register records. Oliver Bender; Hans Juergen Boehmer; Doreen Jens; Kim P. Schumacher;. Volume 20. 2. 149--163
Spatial patterns of plant invasiveness in a riparian corridor. Birgitta Malm Renöfält; Roland Jansson; Christer Nilsson;. Volume 20. 2. 165--176
Spatial and non-spatial factors: When do they affect landscape indicators of watershed loading?. Sarah E. Gergel;. Volume 20. 2. 177--189
Variation in nitrogen deposition and available soil nitrogen in a forest–grassland ecotone in Canada. Martin Köchy; Scott D. Wilson;. Volume 20. 2. 191--202
Modeling and field-testing of Ovenbird (Seiurus aurocapillus) responses to boreal forest dissection by energy sector development at multiple spatial scales. Erin M. Bayne; Steve L. Van Wilgenburg; Stan Boutin; Keith A. Hobson;. Volume 20. 2. 203--216
The response of elephants to the spatial heterogeneity of vegetation in a Southern African agricultural landscape. Amon Murwira; Andrew K. Skidmore;. Volume 20. 2. 217--234
Urban domestic gardens (V): relationships between landcover composition, housing and landscape. Richard M. Smith; Kevin J. Gaston; Philip H. Warren; Ken Thompson;. Volume 20. 2. 235--253
Functional heterogencity in resources within landscapes and herbivore population dynamics. Norman Owen-Smith;. Volume 20. 3. 317
Introducing spatial grazing impacts into the prediction of moorland vegetation dynamics. S.C.F. Palmer; I.J. Gordon; A.J. Hester; R.J. Pakeman;. Volume 20. 3. 335
Preface. Dean P. Anderson;. Volume 20. 3. 255--256
Factors influencing female home range sizes in elk (Cervus elaphus) in North American landscapes. Dean P. Anderson; James D. Forester; Monica G. Turner; Jacqui L. Frair; Evelyn H. Merrill; Daniel Fortin; Julie S. Mao; Mark S. Boyce;. Volume 20. 3. 257--271
Scales of movement by elk (Cervus elaphus) in response to heterogeneity in forage resources and predation risk. Jacqueline L. Frair; Evelyn H. Merrill; Darcy R. Visscher; Daniel Fortin; Hawthorne L. Beyer; Juan M. Morales;. Volume 20. 3. 273--287
Landscape-level movements of North American elk (Cervus elaphus): effects of habitat patch structure and topography. John G. Kie; Alan A. Ager; R. Terry Bowyer;. Volume 20. 3. 289--300
Adaptive models for large herbivore movements in heterogeneous landscapes. Juan Manuel Morales; Daniel Fortin; Jacqueline L. Frair; Evelyn H. Merrill;. Volume 20. 3. 301--316
The development of forage production and utilization gradients around livestock watering points. Peter B. Adler; Sonia A. Hall;. Volume 20. 3. 319--333
The effect of fire spatial scale on Bison grazing intensity. L.L. Wallace; K.A. Crosthwaite;. Volume 20. 3. 337--349
Effects of mammalian herbivores on revegetation of disturbed areas in the forest-tundra ecotone in northern Fennoscandia. Johan Olofsson; Philip E. Hulme; Lauri Oksanen; Otso Suominen;. Volume 20. 3. 351--359
A Practical Map-Analysis Tool for Detecting Potential Dispersal Corridors. William W. Hargrove; Forrest M. Hoffman; Rebecca A. Efroymson;. Volume 20. 4. 361--373
Optimal Sampling Scheme for Estimation Landscape Mapping of Vegetation Cover. Xiangyun Xiao; George Gertner; Guangxing Wang; Alan B. Anderson;. Volume 20. 4. 375--387
Soil Phosphorus Variability: Scale-dependence in an Urbanizing Agricultural Landscape. Elena M. Bennett; Stephen R. Carpenter; Murray K. Clayton;. Volume 20. 4. 389--400
Geometry of Large Woodland Remnants and its Influence on Avifaunal Distributions. Walter Harwood; Ralph Mac Nally;. Volume 20. 4. 401--416
Green Veining: Landscape Determinants of Biodiversity in European Agricultural Landscapes. Carla J. Grashof-Bokdam; Frank Langevelde;. Volume 20. 4. 417--439
The Importance of Spatial Scale for Conservation and Assessment of Anuran Populations in Coastal Wetlands of the Western Great Lakes, USA. Steven J. Price; David R. Marks; Robert W. Howe; JoAnn M. Hanowski; Gerald J. Niemi;. Volume 20. 4. 441--454
Gap Crossing Decisions by Reed Warblers (Acrocephalus Scirpaceus) in Agricultural Landscapes. L. Bosschieter; P.W. Goedhart;. Volume 20. 4. 455--468
Habitat Associations and Population Trends of Two Hawks in an Urbanizing Grassland Region in Colorado. Eric Schmidt; Carl E. Bock;. Volume 20. 4. 469--478
Clarifying Integrative Research Concepts in Landscape Ecology. Gunther Tress; Bärbel Tress; Gary Fry;. Volume 20. 4. 479--493
Book Review: Food Webs at the Landscape Level. By Gary A. Polis, Mary E. Power, and Gary R. Huxel (eds.), University of Chicago Press, Chicago. 2004, 548 pp.
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

Владислав Волков

Top Seed 01* 40r

Стаж: 17 лет 4 месяца

Сообщений: 1056

Владислав Волков · 18-Мар-10 13:12 (спустя 1 день 3 часа)

strash83 писал(а):
Владислав Волков спасибо большое, скоро скачаю.
Сейчас у меня на руках все вышедшие номера но в виде отдельных статей. Статьи все, вот не знаю выложить все что есть одним махом или сначала все статьи по номерам собрать в единые файлы, как я сделала с 1-5 томами.
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

strash83

VIP (Заслуженный)

Стаж: 18 лет 1 месяц

Сообщений: 9418

strash83 · 19-Мар-10 11:31 (спустя 22 часа)

Владислав Волков как вам удобнее, и как считаете лучшим оставлять наследие!
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

Владислав Волков

Top Seed 01* 40r

Стаж: 17 лет 4 месяца

Сообщений: 1056

Владислав Волков · 24-Мар-10 03:23 (спустя 4 дня)

Изменил мое первое сообщение и добавил в него список всех опубликованных статей. Если что-то очень понадобиться из статей, которые еще не выложил, можно попросить через личку.
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

Владислав Волков

Top Seed 01* 40r

Стаж: 17 лет 4 месяца

Сообщений: 1056

Владислав Волков · 27-Мар-10 08:05 (спустя 3 дня, ред. 29-Мар-10 02:38)

Все, добил все тома. Добавил к раздаче тома 21-25. Приношу всем извинения, я понимаю что надо было сначала добить все тома а потом выкладывать. Ну так уж получилось.
Есть еще следующие журналы
Folia Geobotanica
Urban Ecosystems
Ecosystems
Все на английском.
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

Владислав Волков

Top Seed 01* 40r

Стаж: 17 лет 4 месяца

Сообщений: 1056

Владислав Волков · 05-Апр-10 19:33 (спустя 9 дней)

Не понимаю чем дело, кроме меня получается ни один не скачал раздачу полностью чтоли, ни одного сида... :(, кроме меня.
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

Владислав Волков

Top Seed 01* 40r

Стаж: 17 лет 4 месяца

Сообщений: 1056

Владислав Волков · 16-Апр-10 00:41 (спустя 10 дней)

Какие-то проблемы у меня с раздачей этой, и вообще с разадчами с каокго-то бока мой торрент клиентп ерестал раздавать. качать качаета раздавать не раздает.
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

Frol333

Стаж: 16 лет 8 месяцев

Сообщений: 69


Frol333 · 16-Апр-10 08:18 (спустя 7 часов, ред. 16-Апр-10 08:18)

Дораздать можно до конца?
А то после перезаливки торрента скачивание не идет...
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

Владислав Волков

Top Seed 01* 40r

Стаж: 17 лет 4 месяца

Сообщений: 1056

Владислав Волков · 16-Апр-10 11:55 (спустя 3 часа, ред. 16-Апр-10 11:55)

Извините у меня какие-то проблемы с клиентом, ни с того нис сего он перестал раздавать, последие сутки я сидел на раздаче но ничего. Только напсиано "В очереди на раздачу", при этом качать качает нормально. Раздает только то что качает.... Без понятия что делать. Такое у меня впервые за 2 года.
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

Frol333

Стаж: 16 лет 8 месяцев

Сообщений: 69


Frol333 · 18-Апр-10 09:07 (спустя 1 день 21 час)

Ура! Ночью случилось чудо! Торрент дораздался до конца! Спасибо большое!
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

Владислав Волков

Top Seed 01* 40r

Стаж: 17 лет 4 месяца

Сообщений: 1056

Владислав Волков · 18-Апр-10 12:36 (спустя 3 часа)

Я просто нахр.н удалил торент-клиент с компа и установил заново , вроде помогло.
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

Djain_Torrent

Стаж: 15 лет 9 месяцев

Сообщений: 2


Djain_Torrent · 09-Май-10 11:09 (спустя 20 дней)

Владислав Волков писал(а):
Есть еще следующие журналы
Folia Geobotanica
Urban Ecosystems
Ecosystems
Все на английском.
Выкладывай
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

Владислав Волков

Top Seed 01* 40r

Стаж: 17 лет 4 месяца

Сообщений: 1056

Владислав Волков · 10-Май-10 04:29 (спустя 17 часов)

Поздно, уезжаю из города в тайгу на несколько лет. Работать в заповеднике. Выкладывать в виде отдельных статей не отредактирвоав и не собрав как тут не хочу. Так что может в будущем. Но если кому понадобиться отдельная статья из этих журналов пишите в личку, постараюсь прислать. Поиск по статьям на сайте шпрингер.com
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

bop4yh123

Стаж: 16 лет 5 месяцев

Сообщений: 4


bop4yh123 · 08-Авг-11 07:59 (спустя 1 год 2 месяца, ред. 08-Авг-11 07:59)

Народ, встаньте на раздачу, будте добры, а то скорость 1kb. Сильно нужны английские статьи по экологии.
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

Altunopa

Стаж: 15 лет 10 месяцев

Сообщений: 48


Altunopa · 30-Окт-13 19:14 (спустя 2 года 2 месяца)

Друзья, а есть у кого-то журнал "Ecological Modelling" http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/03043800
Желательно полностью или хотя бы за последние 10-12 лет?
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 

Владислав Волков

Top Seed 01* 40r

Стаж: 17 лет 4 месяца

Сообщений: 1056

Владислав Волков · 31-Окт-13 08:26 (спустя 13 часов)

Altunopa
Так как вроде бы запрещено ссылки на другие ресурсы публиковать, ответил вам в личку где бесплатно можно найти статьи из журнала и где найти статьи из свежих выпусков
[Профиль]  [ЛС] 
 
Ответить
Loading...
Error