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1 s in the mature temperate forest on Changbai Mountain.
2 s preserved in the southern subregion of the mountains.
3 as well as high-elevation areas of the Rocky Mountains.
4  current elevational limits in high-latitude mountains.
5 tory of ice-surface lowering relative to the mountains.
6 t high elevation sites in the Colorado Rocky Mountains.
7 the locations of microrefugia areas in these mountains.
8 rim Basin and the adjacent southern Tianshan Mountains.
9 complex landscape with millions of hills and mountains.
10 and burned 257314 acres in the Sierra Nevada Mountains.
11 isova 3) found in Denisova Cave in the Altai Mountains.
12 iff Ice Tongue of the central Transantarctic Mountains.
13 vered from a cave in the Romanian Carpathian Mountains.
14 ana and Z. glacier across the northern Rocky Mountains.
15 chium plantagineum seed oil from the Lattias Mountains (15% SDA of total fatty acids).
16 100 km east of Rome, in the central Apennine Mountains, a critically endangered population of approxi
17 ordonorum), which is endemic to the Udzungwa Mountains and a known indicator species that thrives in
18  function images across the Chinese Tianshan Mountains and available data from both deep seismic prof
19 hment with an area of 3200 km(2) in the Harz Mountains and central German lowlands was investigated b
20 the ancestors of Neanderthals from the Altai Mountains and early modern humans met and interbred, pos
21 ertheless, the effect of geographic barriers-mountains and oceans-is clear.
22 ecies to occur within the Northwest Forested Mountains and the highest number of tree species stresse
23 ifically, the northern parts of the Hengduan Mountains and the southeastern Tibet Valley, the norther
24 aphic location (lower in West South Central, Mountain, and Pacific census regions), and receptor stat
25 wind direction, data on geographic distance, mountains, and PM 2.5 concentrations.
26 netic diversity and diversification in these mountains, and we also sought to identify the locations
27 western USA, on the Navajo Nation, the White Mountain Apache reservation, and the San Carlos Apache I
28                                     Tropical mountains are hot spots of biodiversity and endemism, bu
29                                     Tropical mountains are usually characterized by a vertically-arra
30 seismic array along the Chishan River in the mountain area of southern Taiwan, where there is strong
31 of phosphorus (P) recently increased in some mountain areas due to elevated atmospheric input of P ri
32  around the central and southern Appalachian Mountains as part of the Appalachian Landscape Conservat
33 e glacier chronologies in the Transantarctic Mountains as proxies for retreat of grounded glacier ice
34 e (Picea abies), bird cherry (Prunus padus), mountain ash (Sorbus aucuparia), ground elder (Aegopodiu
35 es shifted downward or stayed stable on most mountains between 1991 and 2010, but also shifted upward
36 ound the world will have profound impacts on mountain biodiversity.
37 s to endemism by sampling an entire tropical mountain biota on the 4,095-metre-high Mount Kinabalu in
38 rbivores and suggests that chewing damage on mountain birch foliage could significantly increase reac
39 ent in the wider landscape, lichen heath and mountain birch forest.
40 sity on herbivore-induced VOC emissions from mountain birch in laboratory experiments and assessed th
41  of years and hundreds of fault offsets, the mountain blocks display large uplift and tilting over a
42 otwall are small and inadequate to raise the mountain blocks.
43  arc segments currently exposed in the Coast Mountains, British Columbia, and the Sierra Nevada and M
44 sal constraints - in addition to climate and mountain building - strongly shape current species richn
45 ological exchanges occurred well after major mountain building periods.
46       Our results imply that deformation and mountain building significantly post-date Indo-Asian col
47 s of diversification models that incorporate mountain building, climate change, and trait evolution t
48 ity is a resilient feature only modulated by mountain building, global cooling and sea retreat.
49 ermed M-type subduction, is proposed for the mountain-building processes in intracontinental compress
50  Earlier culture-independent studies in Iron Mountain (California) pointed at an abundant archaeal gr
51 for water quality in remote, high-elevation, mountain catchments considered to be our pristine refere
52 evolution of rhodopsin function in an Andean mountain catfish system spanning a range of elevations.
53 -2016 in nonacidic alpine lakes in the Tatra Mountains (Central Europe), the average [Ca + Mg] concen
54 e common lizard (Zootoca vivipara) from four mountain chains as a function of air temperatures during
55  South Africa, Yunnan province in China, and mountain chains in Papua-New Guinea.
56                                  By tracking mountain chicken (Leptodactylus fallax) populations befo
57     The emergence of chytridiomycosis in the mountain chicken was predictable, but the decline could
58 n a subalpine timberline ecotone on Changbai Mountain, China increased with elevation.
59 e-grained, clay-rich sediments in the Koryak Mountains, Chukotka (Russia).
60    Experimental data from a sample of expert mountain climbers from 27 countries confirmed that climb
61     An archival analysis of 30,625 Himalayan mountain climbers from 56 countries on 5,104 expeditions
62 sagebrush steppe of the North American Rocky Mountains, combining phylogenetic analysis of fungi and
63 ed unanticipated gene flow through the Andes mountains connecting the VBRV-free Pacific coast to the
64  ( 500 to 1200 m above sea level) across 12 mountains containing the transition from northern hardwo
65  (~500 to ~1200 m above sea level) across 12 mountains containing the transition from northern hardwo
66  of hydrologic change from the Sierra Nevada Mountains coupled with marine sediment records from the
67 ely record climatic- and tectonic-controlled mountain denudation and play an important role in unders
68  and significant negative association in the Mountain division.
69 colonizations across the Andes indicate that mountains do not constrain orchid dispersal over long ti
70                                           In mountains, ecotones are compressed and act as potential
71 lyzed tissue samples from free-ranging Rocky Mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni) and used hierarchi
72 populations of farmed and free-ranging Rocky Mountain elk (Cervus elaphus nelsoni;n= 323), and nasal
73 tchment that transitions from an undisturbed mountain environment into urban Salt Lake City, Utah.
74  (7 cm a(-1)) on glaciers in three different mountain environments in Kyrgyzstan, based on albedo red
75 o attended baseline examinations of the Blue Mountains Eye Study (1992-1994), and 75.8%, 76.7%, and 5
76 late AMD data from the population-based Blue Mountains Eye Study (BMES) cohort.
77  Prevalence data were compared with the Blue Mountains Eye Study (BMES) in Australia.
78 SD) age of the 1726 participants in the Blue Mountains Eye Study 2 cohort with normal homocysteine le
79 tly associated with incident OAG in the Blue Mountains Eye Study cohort (P = .006 and P = .004, respe
80 98% [95% CI, 0.49-1.86] vs. 0.91%), the Blue Mountains Eye Study population (1.10% [95% CI, 0.52-9.56
81 4, a population-based cohort study, the Blue Mountains Eye Study, was conducted with 3654 residents (
82  to the in situ origin and uniqueness of the mountain fauna.
83 oss >250 000 stream km in the Northern Rocky Mountains for two native salmonids-bull trout (BT) and c
84 ty-based landscapes, in Southern Appalachian Mountain forests and asked (i) How do aesthetic preferen
85 of productivity across many Central European mountain forests under future climate change.
86 to drive increased gravel aggradation at the mountain front.
87 ecticidal proteins, Hadronyche versuta (Blue Mountains funnel-web spider) neurotoxin (Hvt) and onion
88 modern synthesis of the microbial ecology of mountain glacier ecosystems, and particularly those at l
89 ent the biodiversity and functional roles of mountain glacier microbiota; describe the ecological imp
90                                    Moreover, mountain glaciers are typically steeper, more dependent
91             In the Northern Hemisphere, most mountain glaciers experienced their largest extent in th
92  polar research, with less attention paid to mountain glaciers that overlap environmentally and ecolo
93 One difference lies in the susceptibility of mountain glaciers to the near-term threat of climate cha
94 n age-structured population model to project mountain goat population trajectories for 10 different G
95                        Projected declines of mountain goat populations are driven by climate-linked b
96 se opposing climate-driven effects influence mountain goat populations, we developed an age-structure
97          Demographic data collected from 447 mountain goats in 10 coastal Alaska, USA, populations ov
98 d domestic cat (24.08 % homozygous), Virunga Mountain Gorilla (78.12 %), inbred Abyssinian cat (62.63
99 three cases of multi-male, multi-female wild mountain gorilla (G. beringei) groups attacking extra-gr
100                    The critically endangered mountain gorilla population was suspected of infection w
101      Together, our findings demonstrate that mountain gorilla's infection with GbbLCV-1 could provide
102 ing humans) violent intergroup conflict, but mountain gorillas are non-territorial herbivores with lo
103                           We discovered that mountain gorillas are widely infected (n = 143/332) with
104                  Fifty-two percent of infant mountain gorillas were orally shedding GbbLCV-1, suggest
105  the presence of EBV or an EBV-like virus in mountain gorillas, we conducted the first population-wid
106  with wilderness and current connectivity to mountain grasslands.
107 mmercial sheep flock managed under extensive mountain grazing in the east region of the Cantabrian mo
108            We found that the Chuska and Zuni Mountains (>75 km distant) were the most likely sources,
109 lant populations from the summit of Ciemniak Mountain had larger antenna dimensions and chlorophyll c
110 sponsible for the uplift of intracontinental mountains has puzzled geologists for decades.
111 oram, Pamir Alai, Kunlun Shan, and Tian Shan mountains-have the highest concentration of glaciers glo
112 m coastal and Amazonian regions to the Andes Mountains; however, a detailed characterization of the d
113 es C-gradient mountainous system on Changbai Mountain in northeast China.
114 ctors in glacier-fed streams in the Tianshan Mountains in Central Asia.
115  distributions of rolled-leaf beetles on two mountains in Costa Rica.
116 air temperature at two sides in the Changbai Mountains in northeast China.
117 lus from the Late Devonian of the Holy Cross Mountains in Poland.
118 a Neanderthal and a Denisovan from the Altai Mountains in Siberia together with the sequences of chro
119 nic nuclide data from the southern Ellsworth Mountains in the heart of the Weddell Sea embayment that
120  the Beardmore Glacier in the Transantarctic Mountains (in order of increasing elevation): Ebony Ridg
121         Walnuts grown in the zone with Andes Mountains influence showed higher (p<0.05) sugar and uns
122                                   As Qinling Mountain is the main recharge area of two large water tr
123 hese divergences, but uplift of the Gangdese mountains is rejected due to its timing.
124 of this strain from acidic streamer in Parys Mountain (Isle of Anglesey, UK).
125 in feedbacks between climate, tectonics, and mountain landscape evolution.
126                 Our findings illustrate that mountain lion exposure to PLVA is relatively common but
127 s A (PLVA), between bobcats (Lynx rufus) and mountain lions (Puma concolor) for a small number of ani
128  a bobcat-adapted virus which is less fit in mountain lions and under intense selection pressure in t
129  that PLVA fitness is severely restricted in mountain lions compared to that in bobcats.
130 puma lentivirus A (PLVA) between bobcats and mountain lions in two geographic regions.
131 , interspecific transmission from bobcats to mountain lions predominates in California.
132 s for foxes, dogs, coyotes, wolves, bobcats, mountain lions, bears, and birds (buzzards, eagles, hawk
133  selection in three of six PLVA genomes from mountain lions, but we did not detect selection among 20
134 f PLV isolates from free-ranging bobcats and mountain lions.
135                                 In the Kenai Mountains, mean tall shrub and climate velocities were b
136                In the better sampled Chugach Mountains, mean tundra retreat was 1.2 m y(-1) and clima
137 udy, we present the results from a Brazilian mountain mire (Pinheiro mire, Minas Gerais, SE Brazil),
138 d adult Barbary macaques in the Middle Atlas Mountains, Morocco, as a case study.
139  (n = 2,611), eastern lowland (n = 103), and mountain (n = 218) gorillas for gorilla SIV (SIVgor) ant
140 orest bordering moso bamboo forest in Tianmu Mountain Nature Reserve during the period between 2005 a
141 ountains, VT, and -1.3 m yr(-1) in the White Mountains, NH.
142 nts at a tropical wet forest in the Luquillo Mountains, northeastern Puerto Rico, U.S.
143 grazing in the east region of the Cantabrian mountain (Northern Spain) was investigated.
144  year period at 24 forest sites at Whiteface Mountain, NY, USA, that ranged from 450 to 1450 m above
145  around the world, some glaciers in the High Mountains of Asia appear to have gained mass in recent d
146                                     The high mountains of Asia-encompassing the Himalayas, the Hindu
147 e discrete routes of connectivity across the mountains of Asia.
148 e and extended to the northern Sierra Nevada Mountains of California and Nevada monitoring sites.
149  mobility patterns of nomadic herders in the mountains of inner Asia.
150 olithic woman from Ganj Dareh, in the Zagros Mountains of Iran, a site with early evidence for an eco
151 southern margin of their ranges in the Rocky Mountains of Montana, USA, between 1988 and 2014 and ana
152 ts of Mirror Lake, a 15-ha lake in the White Mountains of New Hampshire surrounded by northern hardwo
153 bbard Brook Experimental Forest in the White Mountains of New Hampshire.
154 a are thought to have originated in the high mountains of North America and Eurasia, migrated northwa
155 rence watersheds in the southern Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina, USA to determine whether wa
156                                   The Andean mountains of South America are the most species-rich bio
157                                          The mountains of southwest China (MSC) harbor extremely high
158 d Near East living almost exclusively in the mountains of Syria, Lebanon and Israel whose ~1000 year
159                              The Eastern Arc Mountains of Tanzania and the Atlantic Forest of Brazil
160 effects of human disturbance in the Udzungwa Mountains of Tanzania, which is an important part of a u
161 s in a 2715 km(2) area in the high elevation mountains of the Ecuadorian paramo.
162 thermal plight for cold-water species within mountains of the northwestern United States.
163 ced invasive fish, across the Northern Rocky Mountains of the United States.
164 es than different elevations within the same mountain or watershed.
165 r words, similar elevations across different mountains or watersheds harbor more similar species and
166 lley, the northern side of the middle Kunlun Mountains, parts of the Pamir Plateau, the northern Paki
167 sistent with Janzen's Rule, the tendency for mountain passes to be effectively "higher" in the tropic
168 ring the ecology and mobility of inner Asian mountain pastoralists, we use 'flow accumulation' modell
169  of the dominating botanical families in the mountain pasture prevailed in the sheep diet of the comm
170 Vaccinium uliginosum L.) collected from high mountain pastures in northeast Anatolia (Turkey) were ex
171 ial methodological improvement applicable to mountain peatlands across the globe, facilitating mappin
172                            However, tropical mountain peatlands contain extensive peat soils that hav
173 n be used for supplementing dietary foods of mountain people.
174 bility to bark beetle outbreaks, focusing on mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae) and Dougl
175 eeding bark beetles, and species such as the mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae) and the s
176 re stages under strong herbivory caused by a mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae) outbreak.
177 eing transformed by forest die-off caused by mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae), with imp
178                                              Mountain pine beetle (MPB, Dendroctonus ponderosae) is a
179  steep decline due to high susceptibility to mountain pine beetle and the non-native white pine blist
180                          Greater survival to mountain pine beetle attack in slow-growing families ref
181 me evolution and incipient speciation in the mountain pine beetle.
182                                              Mountain pine beetles (MPB, Dendroctonus ponderosae Hopk
183                In the western United States, mountain pine beetles (MPBs) have killed pine trees acro
184        By contrast, growth of high-elevation mountain pine forests is enhanced by climate warming.
185                               Contrastingly, mountain pine growth is expected to increase by +12.5% d
186 bies alba; Scots pine, Pinus sylvestris; and mountain pine, Pinus uncinata) in mountainous areas of N
187      Comparing transcriptomes of railway and mountain plants across time courses with and without ver
188 t shock and freezing tolerance compared with mountain plants, where tolerance must be induced.
189 he environmental characteristics of the high-mountain plateau led to the origin of a species adapted
190 ly by major mountain ridges, suggesting that mountains played a role in the genetic differentiation o
191                             Uncertainties in mountain precipitation are poorly known, but, given the
192              Rivers sourced in the Himalayan mountain range carry some of the largest sediment loads
193 ement drive from the shore to the precoastal mountain range furthest downwind of the city center indi
194 om 72 sites distributed across a 170-km-long mountain range in Shenandoah National Park, Virginia, US
195              In classic orogenic models, the mountain range is underlain by a deep crustal root.
196                                     The Hida Mountain Range of central Japan hosts the youngest expos
197 ranite and Takidani Granodiorite in the Hida Mountain Range, and from modern river sediments whose fl
198                                      In each mountain range, the posterior mode of tall woody vegetat
199 wild fauna at most sites north of the Balkan mountain range.
200         The appearance of detritus shed from mountain ranges along the northern margin of the Tibetan
201                                              Mountain ranges are the world's natural water towers and
202 tance for biogeography, the specific role of mountain ranges as a dispersal barrier between South and
203 nificant population structure across various mountain ranges in the USA, allowing us to investigate w
204 topography in Earth's most rapidly uplifting mountain ranges is rapidly replaced by fluvial topograph
205 shrub, and tundra ecosystems in two pristine mountain ranges of Alaska, we apply a Bayesian, error-pr
206  been living for centuries in the Hindu Kush mountain ranges of present-day Pakistan.
207  were harvested and transported from distant mountain ranges to build the great houses at Chaco Canyo
208 0 streams (24 sites), six in GNP and four in mountain ranges up to 600 km southwest.
209 0 streams (24 sites), six in GNP and four in mountain ranges up to ~600 km southwest.
210  the last major glaciation the topography of mountain ranges worldwide remains dominated by character
211 r, industrial area, precoastal depression, 2 mountain ranges) for measurements and data analysis.
212                                     For both mountain ranges, the 95% highest posterior density of cl
213  from glacier retreat in Southern Hemisphere mountain ranges, the Antarctic warming was mostly comple
214         Using a network of plots across five mountain ranges, we described patterns of upslope elevat
215  exclusivity, and restricted gene flow among mountain ranges.
216                           In the Eastern Arc Mountains, regenerating 8,134 ha of forest would create
217 s gradually while sequestration in the Rocky Mountain region declines rapidly and could become a sour
218                               The Adirondack Mountain region is an extensive geographic area (26,305
219  risk in Colombia associated with the Andean mountain region when compared with the low-risk region o
220 is pilot study, all patients from a specific mountain region who received an operation between March
221 h Atlantic region and the lowest rate in the Mountain region.
222 (82.4% of eligible participants) of the Blue Mountains region aged 49 years and older.
223          Population-based cohort in the Blue Mountains region, west of Sydney, Australia.
224 genic gradient (forest conservation areas in mountain regions, and intensive agriculturally used lowl
225 st to plants from sheltered outcrops in hill/mountain regions, are rapid cycling, have lost the verna
226 uggested the existence of LGM refuges within mountain regions.
227 ith haplotype clusters coinciding with major mountain regions.
228 odel to a case study of road effects on wild mountain reindeer summer movements.
229  flows originated from groundwater in nearby mountains released by the earthquake.
230  receiver function image across the Tianshan Mountains reveals that the lithosphere of the Junggar Ba
231  and soil, with low functional richness at a mountain ridge under specific environmental conditions.
232 f human populations occupying the plains and mountain ridges separating Europe from Asia has been eve
233 n among regions separated primarily by major mountain ridges, suggesting that mountains played a role
234 the ancestors of Neanderthals from the Altai Mountains roughly 100,000 years ago.
235 ent sites and shotgun sequence data of Parys Mountain samples suggests an extensive genetic exchange
236 ubantarctic Andes and subarctic Scandinavian mountains (Scandes), to disentangle their roles in limit
237 of the UK sheep industry were studied: Welsh Mountain, Scottish Blackface, Welsh Mule and Texel (n =
238 gle atrial myocytes from young and old Welsh Mountain sheep, we show the free Ca(2+) transient amplit
239                                        Acute mountain sickness (AMS) affects more than 25% of individ
240  exposure to high altitude, the CBF in acute mountain sickness (AMS) subjects was higher (P < 0.05),
241            We observed patients with chronic mountain sickness (CMS) in our clinic who developed prog
242 rait in some high-altitude dwellers (chronic mountain sickness [CMS] or Monge's disease) but not othe
243 art failure is a hallmark feature of chronic mountain sickness in maladapted populations living at hi
244                      The prevalence of acute mountain sickness increases with higher altitudes.
245 ed mortality due to heart failure in chronic mountain sickness most likely reduces fitness.
246  fact that Barcroft was suffering from acute mountain sickness when he made it!
247 altitude (VAS[O]; various thresholds), Acute Mountain Sickness-Cerebral score (AMS-C; >/=0.7 indicate
248 erall feeling of sickness at altitude, Acute Mountain Sickness-Cerebral, and clinical functional scor
249 nnaire Score to assess the severity of acute mountain sickness.
250 The transfer of animals to an uncontaminated mountain site during summer proved to be an effective de
251 f terrace surfaces between the shoreline and mountain slopes and hence local vegetation, soil develop
252 trongly influenced by melting of accumulated mountain snowpack.
253                            Rapidly declining mountain snowpacks and earlier melt onsets result in a 1
254 of a circumarctic distribution of the arctic mountain sorrel (Oxyria digyna) by conducting a phylogeo
255 e, with implications for the conservation of mountain species and the ecosystem functions they provid
256 cal similarity of two widely distributed low-mountain species, the environmental characteristics of t
257                                        Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF) has emerged as a significa
258    This Review explores the history of Rocky Mountain spotted fever in Mexico, current epidemiology,
259                                        Rocky Mountain spotted fever, a tick-borne zoonosis caused by
260 icks) as drivers of epidemic levels of Rocky Mountain spotted fever.
261 rather than being climatic cul-de-sacs, many mountain streams appear poised to be redoubts for cold-w
262 -biased but basically dark deep sea to clear mountain streams.
263 tation strategy; due to the conical shape of mountains, summer range was expected to decline by 17%-8
264 ver of mass balance changes in high-latitude mountain systems, and demonstrate that debris-covered gl
265                           The Transantarctic Mountains (TAM) are the world's longest rift shoulder bu
266 diatoms in tillites along the Transantarctic Mountains (TAMs) have been used to suggest a diminished
267 s, lobate flows of materials, and a singular mountain that appears to be an extrusive cryovolcanic do
268 polygons and the dimensions of the 'floating mountains' (the hills of of water ice along the edges of
269 ds beneath the northern part of the Tianshan Mountains, thereby thickening the overlying crust.
270  sites across 52 wildfires from the US Rocky Mountains to ask if and how changing climate over the la
271 nic nuclide data from the southern Ellsworth Mountains to suggest that the divide of the WAIS has flu
272  the Great Wall to the north and the Qinling Mountains to the south).
273 is a form of surface mining where ridges and mountain tops are removed with explosives to access unde
274 ming is expected to promote uphill shifts in mountain trees.
275 titudinal gradient of the U.S. Sierra Nevada Mountains under climate and area burned by large wildfir
276                                        Among mountain ungulates, survival, a key determinant of demog
277  Interior Highlands and Southern Appalachian Mountains, United States.
278 mportant role in understanding late Cenozoic mountain uplift and global cooling.
279 otropical diversification, and suggests that mountain uplift promotes species diversification across
280  altered by acid pollution in the Adirondack Mountains (USA).
281  triggering rate in the Southern Appalachian Mountains, USA and how this may affect future landslide
282 sure deficit over 2 yr in the Northern Rocky Mountains, USA.
283 e New River basin of the central Appalachian Mountains, USA.
284 llion ha watershed of Tanzania's Eastern Arc Mountains, using geo-referenced and digitized historical
285        Notably, we identify three classes of Mountain-Valley choices that have widely varying 'typica
286 onstrated in polymer films with control over mountain/valley assignments and fold angles using trilay
287 ally mitigate hotspots of stream N inputs at mountain/valley transitions, which have been largely ove
288 th Palaearctic temperate steppe zones or dry mountain valleys, where there are grasses from the genus
289 veys were given to new customers of 23andMe (Mountain View, CA) and Pathway Genomics (San Diego, CA).
290 ication device, MobiusHD (Vascular Dynamics, Mountain View, CA, USA), in patients with resistant hype
291 daries moved down -1.5 m yr(-1) in the Green Mountains, VT, and -1.3 m yr(-1) in the White Mountains,
292  a high elevation site in the Colorado Rocky Mountains was strongly correlated with UV absorbance at
293 nces are threatening the ability of forested mountain watersheds to provide the clean, reliable, and
294 aortic aneurysm (Midwest), and endocarditis (Mountain West and Alaska).
295                 In study 1, conducted in the Mountain West, the intervention increased Latino America
296 h was found for sites located on the tops of mountains whose slopes faced the cement plant.
297 s from rivers draining the central Himalayan mountains, with upstream catchment areas ranging from ab
298  is probably suitable for other high, linear mountains within the continent.
299                    The Grevy's zebra and the mountain zebra are endangered, and hybridization between
300  zebra and two of its subspecies, as well as mountain zebra.

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