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1 t at the Aktru Research Station in the Altai Mountain.
2 onifer forests of California's Sierra Nevada Mountains.
3 ples from the Belukha glacier, Russian Altai Mountains.
4 ds, and mammals, many entirely restricted to mountains.
5 vered from a cave in the Romanian Carpathian Mountains.
6 ana and Z. glacier across the northern Rocky Mountains.
7 hrub that grows mainly in the Atlas Moroccan Mountains.
8 ought to increase species extinction risk in mountains.
9 inliers in the Sahara including the Ahaggar mountains.
10 gocene and diversified first in the Hengduan Mountains.
11 alaeotropical flora, which inhabit temperate mountains.
15 tes of dispersal to the top of this tropical mountain and/or that the habitat is more conducive to mi
17 nnectivity were identified in the Carpathian Mountains and along the Danube River, further confirming
18 ttributed to increased uplift and erosion of mountains and consequent increases in silicate weatherin
19 evidence of the Denisovans outside the Altai Mountains and its analysis unique insights into Denisova
21 es in southern areas, notably the Upper Gila Mountains and South-Central Semi-arid Prairies, and decr
22 ecies to occur within the Northwest Forested Mountains and the highest number of tree species stresse
24 pen habitats that incur daily (e.g. tropical mountains) and/or seasonal extremes in temperature (e.g.
25 3 times that of the adjacent Nyainqentanglha Mountains, and at least an order of magnitude higher tha
28 formed rupture systems crosscut surrounding mountain aquifers, leading to water release that causes
32 wn about the population trends of species in mountain areas due to low accessibility and difficult wo
34 to be major threats for biodiversity in the mountain areas, affecting species abundance and causing
35 opulations highlights a role of the Caucasus Mountains as a barrier to gene flow and suggests a post-
36 around the central and southern Appalachian Mountains as part of the Appalachian Landscape Conservat
37 e glacier chronologies in the Transantarctic Mountains as proxies for retreat of grounded glacier ice
38 changes in climate and land use, the role of mountains as refugia for biodiversity may well come unde
39 e (Picea abies), bird cherry (Prunus padus), mountain ash (Sorbus aucuparia), ground elder (Aegopodiu
41 arth formation, with the supercontinent with mountains at +/-30 degrees being most conducive to formi
42 to map snow depth in the Northern Hemisphere mountains at 1 km2 resolution using an empirical change
44 rvices in up to 84% of wells from the King's Mountain Belt and the Charlotte and Milton Belts of the
47 nue to serve as critical climate refugia for mountain biodiversity even after glaciers disappear.
51 of years and hundreds of fault offsets, the mountain blocks display large uplift and tilting over a
53 Causes of population and range changes in mountain-breeding species are thus liable to be complex,
54 jacent regions were likely driven jointly by mountain building and intensification of the Asian monso
57 Our study demonstrates the importance of mountain-building events and geographical isolation of a
58 ys at the Barcroft Laboratory (3800 m; White Mountain, California) with and without (i) plasma volume
59 his scenario has global implications for the mountain carbon balance and corresponding resource alloc
61 evolution of rhodopsin function in an Andean mountain catfish system spanning a range of elevations.
64 on on spatial cognition in wild food-caching mountain chickadees at high elevations and documented th
70 ted from glaciogenic cloud seeding of winter mountain cloud systems and its spatial and temporal evol
72 , first, there are coverage gaps in the four mountains comprising the potential national park, and ex
74 iven methane concentration, the latitudes of mountains control whether a Snowball Earth forms or not.
75 al montane rivers (TMR) are born in tropical mountains, descend through montane forests, and feed maj
76 normal flood season (e.g., the Sierra Nevada Mountains due to tropical moisture exports) and regions
77 ating bird diversity in a globally important mountain ecosystem of the Hkakabo Razi Landscape in nort
79 that glacier retreat reduces biodiversity in mountain ecosystems through the loss of uniquely adapted
83 ifferent PV placement scenarios in urban and mountain environments for the country of Switzerland.
84 (7 cm a(-1)) on glaciers in three different mountain environments in Kyrgyzstan, based on albedo red
85 from their sources to polar regions and high mountain environments where they can be trapped in ice a
87 98% [95% CI, 0.49-1.86] vs. 0.91%), the Blue Mountains Eye Study population (1.10% [95% CI, 0.52-9.56
88 uld benefit from fallow landscapes, and that mountain farmers are at a growing economic risk worldwid
89 n Victoria Land and along the Transantarctic Mountains for six species of endemic microarthropods (Co
90 ty-based landscapes, in Southern Appalachian Mountain forests and asked (i) How do aesthetic preferen
96 modern synthesis of the microbial ecology of mountain glacier ecosystems, and particularly those at l
97 ent the biodiversity and functional roles of mountain glacier microbiota; describe the ecological imp
98 s study we determined volume changes for 400 mountain glaciers across the Southern Alps, New Zealand
101 polar research, with less attention paid to mountain glaciers that overlap environmentally and ecolo
102 One difference lies in the susceptibility of mountain glaciers to the near-term threat of climate cha
105 ic sheep, domestic goats, bighorn sheep, and mountain goats across the western United States using 59
109 nt as a key food resource for the Endangered mountain gorilla Gorilla beringei beringei and Endangere
110 eous movement and interaction patterns of 17 mountain gorilla groups, we investigated how the occurre
112 single case of B cell lymphoma found in the Mountain gorilla was incorrectly referred to as Gibbon l
113 Together, our findings demonstrate that mountain gorilla's infection with GbbLCV-1 could provide
114 the presence of EBV or an EBV-like virus in mountain gorillas, we conducted the first population-wid
115 te and edaphic properties along an extensive mountain gradient, and suggests that the elevational div
116 ent diversity patterns across this extensive mountain gradient-bacterial diversity had a U shaped pat
120 Subalpine forests in the northern Rocky Mountains have been resilient to stand-replacing fires t
123 would have necessitated extraordinarily high mountains if such river gradients were commonplace at co
125 s with and without fish in the Sierra Nevada Mountains in California to mesocosms at different elevat
127 m elevation gradient in the temperate Rocky Mountains in Colorado, USA, and the tropical Andes in Na
128 h occur along river banks in the Appalachian Mountains in Eastern United States, produce the bluest b
129 udes inhibited Snowball Earth formation, and mountains in low latitudes promoted Snowball Earth forma
136 he defense is a possible explanation for the mountain katydid's counter-intuitive behavior of reveali
137 predators have learned to attack and consume mountain katydids despite their complex defense, and tha
139 Hyper prions and WT mice infected with Rocky Mountain Laboratories prions yielded infectious prion na
140 local NAO reconstruction is obtained from a mountain lacustrine sedimentary archive of the Iberian P
142 s and zooplankton relative abundance for 685 mountain lakes and ponds in the Cascade and Canadian Roc
143 were moved from agricultural, tree crop and mountain landscapes in southern California to blueberry
145 underlines the conservation significance of mountain landscapes via their provision of a range of ha
149 a bobcat-adapted virus which is less fit in mountain lions and under intense selection pressure in t
151 s for foxes, dogs, coyotes, wolves, bobcats, mountain lions, bears, and birds (buzzards, eagles, hawk
152 selection in three of six PLVA genomes from mountain lions, but we did not detect selection among 20
153 ly sensitive to climate change and the Altai Mountains, located in Central and East Asia, are showing
154 elimited by the Tiber River and the Apennine Mountains, manifest a peculiar mitochondrial proximity t
155 ruitment probabilities in the northern Rocky Mountains (NR) and the southwestern US (SW) track the st
158 around the world, some glaciers in the High Mountains of Asia appear to have gained mass in recent d
162 ordingly, year-round breeding populations on mountains of intermediate elevation are likely to be mos
163 southern margin of their ranges in the Rocky Mountains of Montana, USA, between 1988 and 2014 and ana
169 r words, similar elevations across different mountains or watersheds harbor more similar species and
171 ring the ecology and mobility of inner Asian mountain pastoralists, we use 'flow accumulation' modell
174 ctive components of chili pepper, garlic and mountain pepper, were K(a, capsaicin) = 3.5206 x 10(-16)
175 eeding bark beetles, and species such as the mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae) and the s
176 steep decline due to high susceptibility to mountain pine beetle and the non-native white pine blist
180 bies alba; Scots pine, Pinus sylvestris; and mountain pine, Pinus uncinata) in mountainous areas of N
183 vation pine forests located in Mediterranean mountains (Pyrenees, northeastern Spain; Pollino, southe
185 tical flight paths over the US Sierra Nevada mountain range at four different altitudes ranging from
191 but the models built at the second-largest (mountain range) extent were more accurate than those bui
194 tance for biogeography, the specific role of mountain ranges as a dispersal barrier between South and
195 Nicrophorus nepalensis, we demonstrate that mountain ranges differing in elevation and latitude offe
197 nificant population structure across various mountain ranges in the USA, allowing us to investigate w
199 r in the Sierra Nevada and southern Cascades mountain ranges migrated to farther wintering destinatio
201 duals are currently restricted to fragmented mountain ranges on the eastern margin of the Qinghai-Tib
202 econstruction of the geodynamic evolution of mountain ranges under the assumption that rock pressure
204 e the spatial variability between and within mountain ranges, as well as their inter-annual differenc
205 and ponds in the Cascade and Canadian Rocky Mountain Ranges, to reveal the effects of predatory spor
220 e complex climatic characteristics of rugged mountain regions differ fundamentally from those of lowl
221 des released in some of the coal-heavy Rocky Mountain regions were related to electricity produced th
222 of 44 bird species from four major European mountain regions: Fennoscandia, UK upland, south-western
223 f human populations occupying the plains and mountain ridges separating Europe from Asia has been eve
224 ,000 meters above sea level in the Himalayan Mountains, Roopkund Lake is home to the scattered skelet
225 station), Basel (suburban station), and Rigi mountain (rural and high altitude station) in Switzerlan
227 exposure to high altitude, the CBF in acute mountain sickness (AMS) subjects was higher (P < 0.05),
233 r, Andean highlanders suffering from chronic mountain sickness, which is characterized by an excessiv
234 altitude (VAS[O]; various thresholds), Acute Mountain Sickness-Cerebral score (AMS-C; >/=0.7 indicate
235 erall feeling of sickness at altitude, Acute Mountain Sickness-Cerebral, and clinical functional scor
240 r pesticide hazard quotients than those from mountain sites, but those hives also had higher and more
242 f terrace surfaces between the shoreline and mountain slopes and hence local vegetation, soil develop
243 gus pumilio forms monospecific forests along mountain slopes without confounding effects of vegetatio
247 drivers of environmental change in Scottish mountains (snow lie, elevated summer temperatures and ni
249 s interbred with Neanderthals near the Altai Mountains (South Siberia) but where and when they met H.
251 e, with implications for the conservation of mountain species and the ecosystem functions they provid
253 nitude and clinical characteristics of Rocky Mountain spotted fever and other spotted fever rickettsi
255 d fever rickettsioses (SFR), including Rocky Mountain spotted fever, are tick-borne infections with f
260 eed to understand how thermal stress affects mountain stream insects, particularly where glaciers are
263 e found that areal CO(2) evasion fluxes from mountain streams equal or exceed those reported from tro
264 extent of the world's mountains, the role of mountain streams for global carbon fluxes remains elusiv
266 al scale, we estimate the CO(2) evasion from mountain streams to 167 +/- 1.5 Tg C yr(-1), which is hi
267 forests along ecotones to shrublands, Rocky Mountain subalpine forests, and cold upland sagebrush co
268 tation strategy; due to the conical shape of mountains, summer range was expected to decline by 17%-8
272 ver of mass balance changes in high-latitude mountain systems, and demonstrate that debris-covered gl
273 o the difficulties working in high-elevation mountain systems, the impacts of these drivers on alpine
275 espite the large areal extent of the world's mountains, the role of mountain streams for global carbo
276 he extreme species richness of some tropical mountains, this variation has proven challenging to expl
277 sites across 52 wildfires from the US Rocky Mountains to ask if and how changing climate over the la
278 collected over 9 years in the Colorado Rocky Mountains to perform the first community-wide quantifica
279 is a form of surface mining where ridges and mountain tops are removed with explosives to access unde
280 ved coating crater rims and walls as well as mountain tops, providing spectacular resemblance to terr
283 stream networks of the southern Appalachian Mountains (United States) and their highly speciose and
289 th Palaearctic temperate steppe zones or dry mountain valleys, where there are grasses from the genus
290 veys were given to new customers of 23andMe (Mountain View, CA) and Pathway Genomics (San Diego, CA).
291 PCPC (Iridex Cyclo G6 Glaucoma Laser System, Mountain View, CA) between 2016 and 2018 were identified
293 ication device, MobiusHD (Vascular Dynamics, Mountain View, CA, USA), in patients with resistant hype
294 ugh December 2017 using Google (Google Inc., Mountain View, California), 5 medical databases, and 1 t
295 l-defined stool collection from a GII.2 Snow Mountain Virus (SMV) human challenge study to investigat
298 lly preserved porewater samples of a natural mountain wetland in Gola di Lago, Ticino, Switzerland.
299 g grounds to the alpine regions of the Snowy Mountains, where they endure the hot summer in the cool
300 s from rivers draining the central Himalayan mountains, with upstream catchment areas ranging from ab