All Stories

  1. Community Structure and Biogeochemical Impacts of Microbial Life on Floating Pumice
  2. Diet composition affects the rate and N:P ratio of fish excretion
  3. Grasshoppers Regulate N:P Stoichiometric Homeostasis by Changing Phosphorus Contents in Their Frass
  4. Prokaryotic cells separated from sediments are suitable for elemental composition analysis
  5. Regime Shift in Fertilizer Commodities Indicates More Turbulence Ahead for Food Security
  6. High‐frequency fire alters C : N : P stoichiometry in forest litter
  7. Stoichiometric regulation of phytoplankton toxins
  8. Ecological stoichiometry: An elementary approach using basic principles
  9. A stoichiometric producer-grazer model incorporating the effects of excess food-nutrient content on consumer dynamics
  10. Carbon use efficiency of microbial communities: stoichiometry, methodology and modelling
  11. The biogeography of marine plankton traits
  12. Phosphorus: a limiting nutrient for humanity?
  13. The role of diet in phosphorus demand
  14. Lotka re-loaded: Modeling trophic interactions under stoichiometric constraints
  15. On the “strict homeostasis” assumption in ecological stoichiometry
  16. The Cuatro Ciénegas Basin in Coahuila, Mexico: An Astrobiological Precambrian Park
  17. Travel, Sex, and Food: What's Speciation Got to Do with It?
  18. Faculty Opinions recommendation of Global-scale latitudinal patterns of plant fine-root nitrogen and phosphorus.
  19. A World Awash with Nitrogen
  20. Greenhouse gas dynamics in lakes receiving atmospheric nitrogen deposition
  21. Faculty Opinions recommendation of Increasing N abundance in the northwestern Pacific Ocean due to atmospheric nitrogen deposition.
  22. A broken biogeochemical cycle
  23. A transgenic approach to enhance phosphorus use efficiency in crops as part of a comprehensive strategy for sustainable agriculture
  24. Faculty Opinions recommendation of Biogeography and variability of eleven mineral elements in plant leaves across gradients of climate, soil and plant functional type in China.
  25. Faculty Opinions recommendation of How do consumers deal with stoichiometric constraints? Lessons from functional genomics using Daphnia pulex.
  26. Faculty Opinions recommendation of The frequency and magnitude of non-additive responses to multiple nutrient enrichment.
  27. Sustainability Challenges of Phosphorus and Food: Solutions from Closing the Human Phosphorus Cycle
  28. Rapid top–down regulation of plant C:N:P stoichiometry by grasshoppers in an Inner Mongolia grassland ecosystem
  29. Denitrification kinetics and denitrifier abundances in sediments of lakes receiving atmospheric nitrogen deposition (Colorado, USA)
  30. The origins of the Redfield nitrogen-to-phosphorus ratio are in a homoeostatic protein-to-rRNA ratio
  31. Stoichiometric homeostasis of vascular plants in the Inner Mongolia grassland
  32. Stoichiogenomics: the evolutionary ecology of macromolecular elemental composition
  33. Joint effect of phosphorus limitation and temperature on alkaline phosphatase activity and somatic growth in Daphnia magna
  34. Linking stoichiometric homeostasis with ecosystem structure, functioning, and stability
  35. Faculty Opinions recommendation of Competitive interactions between two meadow grasses under nitrogen and phosphorus limitation.
  36. Linking stoichiometric homoeostasis with ecosystem structure, functioning and stability
  37. Faculty Opinions recommendation of Stoichiometric control of organic carbon-nitrate relationships from soils to the sea.
  38. The evolution of biological stoichiometry under global change
  39. Faculty Opinions recommendation of The story of phosphorus: Global food security and food for thought.
  40. Soil pH, ecological stoichiometry, and allometric scaling in soil biota
  41. Soil pH, ecological stoichiometry, and allometric scaling in soil biota
  42. Atmospheric nitrogen deposition influences denitrification and nitrous oxide production in lakes
  43. Molybdenum-nitrogen co-limitation in freshwater and coastal heterocystous cyanobacteria
  44. III.15 Ecological Stoichiometry
  45. Nutrient availability and phytoplankton nutrient limitation across a gradient of atmospheric nitrogen deposition
  46. Soil acidity, ecological stoichiometry and allometric scaling in grassland food webs
  47. Daphnia species invasion, competitive exclusion, and chaotic coexistence
  48. Faculty Opinions recommendation of Variable ecological effects of hurricanes: the importance of seasonal timing for survival of lizards on Bahamian islands.
  49. Faculty Opinions recommendation of Alteration of island food-web dynamics following major disturbance by hurricanes.
  50. Importance of Exogenous Selection in a Fish Hybrid Zone: Insights from Reciprocal Transplant Experiments
  51. Biological Stoichiometry
  52. Faculty Opinions recommendation of Asymmetric coevolutionary networks facilitate biodiversity maintenance.
  53. Faculty Opinions recommendation of Ecosystem energetic implications of parasite and free-living biomass in three estuaries.
  54. Faculty Opinions recommendation of Ecological community description using the food web, species abundance, and body size.
  55. Faculty Opinions recommendation of Consumer-resource body-size relationships in natural food webs.
  56. The Big Book of Animal Physiology
  57. Do phosphorus requirements for RNA limit genome size in crustacean zooplankton?
  58. Microbial endemism: does phosphorus limitation enhance speciation?
  59. Scale‐dependent carbon:nitrogen:phosphorus seston stoichiometry in marine and freshwaters
  60. Ecological Stoichiometry: Overview
  61. Biological Stoichiometry in Human Cancer
  62. Stoichiometry and the New Biology: The Future Is Now
  63. Dynamics of Stoichiometric Bacteria-Algae Interactions in the Epilimnion
  64. Biological Stoichiometry: A Chemical Bridge between Ecosystem Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
  65. The effect of host Chlorella NC64A carbon : phosphorus ratio on the production of Paramecium bursaria Chlorella Virus‐1
  66. Coupling of growth rate and body stoichiometry in Daphnia: a role for maintenance processes?
  67. Phylogenetic and Growth Form Variation in the Scaling of Nitrogen and Phosphorus in the Seed Plants
  68. Signalling and phosphorus: correlations between mate signalling effort and body elemental composition in crickets
  69. TOO MUCH OF A GOOD THING: ON STOICHIOMETRICALLY BALANCED DIETS AND MAXIMAL GROWTH
  70. Biological stoichiometry of growth in Drosophila melanogaster
  71. Plant allometry, stoichiometry and the temperature‐dependence of primary productivity
  72. Biosimplicity via stoichiometry: the evolution of food-web structure and processes
  73. Dynamics of a stoichiometric discrete producer-grazer model
  74. Genotype × environment interactions, stoichiometric food quality effects, and clonal coexistence in Daphnia pulex
  75. Elements of ecology and evolution
  76. Metabolic Stoichiometry and the Fate of Excess Carbon and Nutrients in Consumers
  77. Erratum to `Modeling and analysis of stoichiometric two-patch consumer–resource systems' by C.R. Miller, Y. Kuang, W.F. Fagan and J.J. Elser [Mathematical Biosciences 189 (2004) 153–184]
  78. Stoichiometry and population dynamics
  79. Stoichiometric Plant-Herbivore Models and Their Interpretation
  80. Modeling and analysis of stoichiometric two-patch consumer–resource systems
  81. FUNDAMENTAL CONNECTIONS AMONG ORGANISM C:N:P STOICHIOMETRY, MACROMOLECULAR COMPOSITION, AND GROWTH
  82. CARBON SEQUESTRATION IN ECOSYSTEMS: THE ROLE OF STOICHIOMETRY
  83. Biological stoichiometry of Daphnia growth: An ecophysiological test of the growth rate hypothesis
  84. Dietary phosphorus affects the growth of larval Manduca sexta
  85. Effects of stoichiometric dietary mixing on Daphnia growth and reproduction
  86. Competition and stoichiometry: coexistence of two predators on one prey
  87. Planktonic biodiversity: Scaling up and down
  88. Associations among ribosomal (r)DNA intergenic spacer length, growth rate, and C:N:P stoichiometry in the genus Daphnia
  89. Biological stoichiometry of tumor dynamics: Mathematical models and analysis
  90. Assessment of ‘top‐down’ and ‘bottom‐up’ forces as determinants of rotifer distribution among lakes in Ontario, Canada
  91. Biological stoichiometry: a theoretical framework connecting ecosystem ecology, evolution, and biochemistry for application in astrobiology
  92. Stoichiometric impacts of increased carbon dioxide on a planktonic herbivore
  93. Biological Stoichiometry: An Ecological Perspective on Tumor Dynamics
  94. Absorption and storage of phosphorus by larval Manduca sexta
  95. Joint Effects of UV Radiation and Phosphorus Supply on Algal Growth Rate and Elemental Composition
  96. Evidence of phosphorus‐limited individual and population growth of Daphnia in a Canadian Shield lake
  97. Effects of light and nutrients on the net accumulation and elemental composition of epilithon in boreal lakes
  98. Stoichiometric food quality and herbivore dynamics
  99. Nutrient Limitation Reduces Food Quality for Zooplankton: Daphnia Response to Seston Phosphorus Enrichment
  100. NUTRIENT LIMITATION REDUCES FOOD QUALITY FOR ZOOPLANKTON:DAPHNIARESPONSE TO SESTON PHOSPHORUS ENRICHMENT
  101. Ecological stoichiometry: from sea to lake to land
  102. Stoichiometric Analysis of Pelagic Ecosystems: The Biogeochemistry of Planktonic Food Webs
  103. The pathway to noxious cyanobacteria blooms in lakes: the food web as the final turn
  104. The Stoichiometry of Consumer-Driven Nutrient Recycling: Theory, Observations, and Consequences
  105. THE STOICHIOMETRY OF CONSUMER-DRIVEN NUTRIENT RECYCLING: THEORY, OBSERVATIONS, AND CONSEQUENCES
  106. Nutrient recycling by Daphnia reduces N2 fixation by cyanobacteria
  107. Factors potentially preventing trophic cascades: Food quality, invertebrate predation, and their interaction
  108. Stoichiometric Constraints on Food-Web Dynamics: A Whole-Lake Experiment on the Canadian Shield
  109. Effects of a cyclopoid copepod (Diacyclops thomasi) on phytoplankton and the microbial food web
  110. Organism Size, Life History, and N:P Stoichiometry
  111. Biogeochemistry and Trophic Ecology: A New Food Web Diagram
  112. Effects of zooplankton on sedimentation in pelagic ecosystems: Theory and test in two lakes of the Canadian shield
  113. Sources of nitrogen and phosphorus supporting the growth of bacteria and phytoplankton in an oligotrophic Canadian shield lake
  114. Microconsumer grazing and sources of limiting nutrients for phytoplankton growth: Application and complications of a nutrient‐depletion/dilution‐gradient technique
  115. Effects of Food Web Compensation After Manipulation of Rainbow Trout in an Oligotrophic Lake
  116. A stoichiometric analysis of the zooplankton–phytoplankton interaction in marine and freshwater ecosystems
  117. Clearing the Waters: Integrated Water Quality and Fisheries Management, Wisconsin Style
  118. Zooplankton community dynamics
  119. Phytoplankton community dynamics
  120. The stoichiometry of N and P in the pelagic zone of Castle Lake, California
  121. Phytoplankton Dynamics and the Role of Grazers in Castle Lake, California
  122. Stoichiometric relationships among producers, consumers and nutrient cycling in pelagic ecosystems
  123. Zooplankton effects on phytoplankton in lakes of contrasting trophic status
  124. The zooplankton-phytoplankton interface in lakes of contrasting trophic status: an experimental comparison
  125. Strength of Zooplankton-Phytoplankton Coupling in Relation to Lake Trophic State
  126. The zooplankton-phytoplankton interface in lakes of contrasting trophic status: an experimental comparison
  127. Algal Nutrient Deficiency: Growth Bioassays versus Physiological Indicators
  128. Chlorophyll budgets: response to food web manipulation
  129. Zooplankton‐mediated transitions between N‐ and P‐limited algal growth1
  130. Daphnia size structure, vertical migration, and phosphorus redistribution
  131. Species-specific algal responses to zooplankton: experimental and field observations in three nutrient-limited lakes
  132. Paul and Peter Lakes: A Liming Experiment Revisited
  133. Alteration of phytoplankton phosphorus status during enrichment experiments: implications for interpreting nutrient enrichment bioassay results
  134. Chlorophyll production, degradation, and sedimentation: Implications for paleolimnology1
  135. Size fractionation of algal chlorophyll, carbon fixation and phosphatase activity: relationships with species-specific size distributions and zooplankton community structure
  136. PHOTOINHIBITION OF TEMPERATE LAKE PHYTOPLANKTON BY NEAR‐SURFACE IRRADIANCE: EVIDENCE FROM VERTICAL PROFILES AND FIELD EXPERIMENTS1
  137. Nutrient Availability for Phytoplankton Production in a Multiple-Impoundment Series
  138. Effects of roots of Myriophyllum verticillatum L. on sediment redox conditions