All Stories

  1. Satellite remote sensing of ecosystem functions: opportunities, challenges and way forward
  2. The global distribution of phytoplankton size spectrum and size classes from their light-absorption spectra derived from satellite data
  3. Phytoplankton–zooplankton dynamics in the ‘presence’ or ‘absence’ of toxic phytoplankton
  4. Sequential variations of phytoplankton growth and mortality in an NPZ model: A remote-sensing-based assessment
  5. Retrieval of phytoplankton size from bio-optical measurements: theory and applications
  6. The phenology of phytoplankton blooms: Ecosystem indicators from remote sensing
  7. Effect of disease-selective predation on prey infected by contact and external sources
  8. The coevolution of two phytoplankton species on a single resource: Allelopathy as a pseudo-mixotrophy
  9. Do phytoplankton communities evolve through a self-regulatory abundance–diversity relationship?
  10. Spatial Interaction Among Nontoxic Phytoplankton, Toxic Phytoplankton, and Zooplankton: Emergence in Space and Time
  11. Nutrient-limited toxin production and the dynamics of two phytoplankton in culture media: A mathematical model
  12. Modeling migratory grazing of zooplankton on toxic and non-toxic phytoplankton
  13. Enrichment and stability: A phenomenological coupling of energy value and carrying capacity
  14. Enrichment and ecosystem stability: Effect of toxic food
  15. Towards a resolution of ‘the paradox of the plankton’: A brief overview of the proposed mechanisms
  16. TOXIN-ALLELOPATHY AMONG PHYTOPLANKTON SPECIES PREVENTS COMPETITIVE EXCLUSION
  17. The stability of ecosystems: A brief overview of the paradox of enrichment
  18. Interaction among Non-toxic Phytoplankton, Toxic Phytoplankton and Zooplankton: Inferences from Field Observations
  19. Competing Effects of Toxin-Producing Phytoplankton on Overall Plankton Populations in the Bay of Bengal
  20. Role of nutrient bound of prey on the dynamics of predator-mediated competitive-coexistence
  21. Disease-selective predation may lead to prey extinction