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Philip J Seddon

Showing results (1-10 of 41) with videos related to

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The Hastings Center Report|July 27, 2017
De-extinction and Barriers to the Application of New Conservation ToolsPhilip J Seddon
Emerging Topics in Life Sciences|September 11, 2020
Creating proxies of extinct species: the bioethics of de-extinctionPhilip J Seddon, Mike King
Trends in Ecology & Evolution|December 28, 2007
Directions in reintroduction biologyDoug P Armstrong, Philip J Seddon
Trends in Parasitology|September 6, 2017
Parasites Lost: Neglecting a Crucial Element in De-ExtinctionChristian Selbach, Philip J Seddon, Robert Poulin
Conservation Physiology|June 14, 2016
Heart rate responses provide an objective evaluation of human disturbance stimuli in breeding birdsUrsula Ellenberg, Thomas Mattern, Philip J Seddon
Trends in Ecology & Evolution|February 12, 2014
Reintroducing resurrected species: selecting DeExtinction candidatesPhilip J Seddon, Axel Moehrenschlager, John Ewen
Current Zoology|March 2, 2018
Emblematic forest dwellers reintroduced into cities: resource selection by translocated juvenile kakaMariano R Recio, Keith Payne, Philip J Seddon
Conservation Biology : the Journal of the Society for Conservation Biology|March 30, 2007
Developing the science of reintroduction biologyPhilip J Seddon, Doug P Armstrong, Richard F Maloney
Molecular Ecology|May 22, 2009
Multilocus assignment analyses reveal multiple units and rare migration events in the recently expanded yellow-eyed penguin (Megadyptes antipodes)Sanne Boessenkool, Bastiaan Star, Jonathan M Waters, et al.
Science (New York, N.Y.)|July 26, 2014
Reversing defaunation: restoring species in a changing worldPhilip J Seddon, Christine J Griffiths, Pritpal S Soorae, et al.
Pageof 5

Showing results (1-10 of 41) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 5
The Hastings Center Report|July 27, 2017
De-extinction and Barriers to the Application of New Conservation ToolsPhilip J Seddon
Emerging Topics in Life Sciences|September 11, 2020
Creating proxies of extinct species: the bioethics of de-extinctionPhilip J Seddon, Mike King
Trends in Ecology & Evolution|December 28, 2007
Directions in reintroduction biologyDoug P Armstrong, Philip J Seddon
Trends in Parasitology|September 6, 2017
Parasites Lost: Neglecting a Crucial Element in De-ExtinctionChristian Selbach, Philip J Seddon, Robert Poulin
Conservation Physiology|June 14, 2016
Heart rate responses provide an objective evaluation of human disturbance stimuli in breeding birdsUrsula Ellenberg, Thomas Mattern, Philip J Seddon
Trends in Ecology & Evolution|February 12, 2014
Reintroducing resurrected species: selecting DeExtinction candidatesPhilip J Seddon, Axel Moehrenschlager, John Ewen
Current Zoology|March 2, 2018
Emblematic forest dwellers reintroduced into cities: resource selection by translocated juvenile kakaMariano R Recio, Keith Payne, Philip J Seddon
Conservation Biology : the Journal of the Society for Conservation Biology|March 30, 2007
Developing the science of reintroduction biologyPhilip J Seddon, Doug P Armstrong, Richard F Maloney
Molecular Ecology|May 22, 2009
Multilocus assignment analyses reveal multiple units and rare migration events in the recently expanded yellow-eyed penguin (Megadyptes antipodes)Sanne Boessenkool, Bastiaan Star, Jonathan M Waters, et al.
Science (New York, N.Y.)|July 26, 2014
Reversing defaunation: restoring species in a changing worldPhilip J Seddon, Christine J Griffiths, Pritpal S Soorae, et al.
Pageof 5