RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,721 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
3,633 are the core, quality-scored corpus (34 lettered sections — see How We Work); the remaining 88 are cross-corpus synthesis documents (68 InterDocs, 12 Connections, 8 Theories) also indexed here.
254 results for "landscape ecology" — page 10 of 13
E_2_04 — Permian-Triassic Great Dying — The Biggest Mass Extinction
Approximately 252 million years ago, at the boundary between the Permian and Triassic periods, Earth experienced the worst mass extinction in its entire history — an event so devastating it has been called "The Great Dyi
E_2_01 — 536 CE Climate Catastrophe
This document examines 536 CE Climate Catastrophe, a topic within the Cataclysms and Chronology research area. Key areas of investigation include "The Worst Year to Be Alive", Historical Eyewitness Accounts, The Volcanic
E_0_00 — Cataclysms & Chronology: Section Summary
E_5_07 — Post-Extinction Recovery Patterns: Adaptive Radiation After Mass Dying
Mass extinctions are not merely episodes of destruction — they fundamentally reshape the trajectory of life through the recovery dynamics that follow. Post-extinction recovery is typically slow (5–10 million years for fu
E_5_06 — Holocene Sixth Mass Extinction: Current Biodiversity Crisis
The Holocene "Sixth Mass Extinction" hypothesis holds that current species loss rates are 100–1,000 times the normal background extinction rate, driven primarily by human activity: habitat destruction, overexploitation,
INTERDOC_52 — Distributed Cognition: Decentralized Information Networks Across Biology
Cognition — defined functionally as adaptive information processing, decision-making, and memory — is implemented across biology in many architectures other than the centralized animal nervous system. Mycorrhizal fungal
ZB_2_14 — Photosynthesis Evolution and Diversity
Photosynthesis — the conversion of light energy into chemical energy — is arguably the most important biochemical process on Earth, responsible for virtually all atmospheric oxygen and the primary energy input for nearly
ZB_2_18 — Phage-Bacteria Coevolution: Arms Races in the Microbial World
Bacteriophages (phages) — viruses that infect and replicate within bacteria — are the most abundant biological entities on Earth (~10³¹ total particles, outnumbering bacteria ~10:1 in most environments), and their coevol
ZB_2_00 — Organismal Biology Physiology: Subfolder Summary
ZB_2_17 — Mycology: Kingdom Fungi
Kingdom Fungi — the second-largest kingdom of eukaryotes after animals, with an estimated 2.2–3.8 million species (only ~150,000 described) — encompasses organisms that obtain nutrition by absorbing dissolved organic mol
ZB_1_14 — Animal Architecture: Nests, Webs, Mounds, and Biological Engineering
Animal architecture — the construction of physical structures by non-human organisms for shelter, reproduction, thermoregulation, prey capture, mate attraction, or environmental modification — represents one of the most
ZB_1_00 — Animal Behavior Cognition: Subfolder Summary
ZB_1_11 — Predator-Prey Dynamics and Coevolution
Predator-prey dynamics are among the most fundamental processes structuring ecological communities, driving evolutionary arms races, and shaping biodiversity. The Lotka-Volterra equations (Lotka, 1925; Volterra, 1926) pr
ZB_1_13 — Sexual Selection and Mate Choice
Sexual selection — first articulated by Darwin (1871) in The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex — is the evolutionary process by which traits that increase mating success are favored, even when they decreas
ZB_1_15 — Infrasound Communication in Wildlife
Infrasound (frequencies below 20 Hz) and low-frequency communication (<100 Hz) are used by elephants, whales, okapi, cassowaries, alligators, and other species for long-range signaling across distances exceeding 10 km. K
ZB_1_18 — Infrasound Communication in Animals: Elephants, Whales & Seismic Signaling
Infrasound — acoustic frequencies below the typical lower limit of human hearing (~20 Hz) — serves as a long-range communication channel for some of Earth's largest animals, enabling coordination over distances of kilome
ZB_5_14 — Conservation Biology
Conservation biology — the scientific study of biodiversity loss and the methods to protect species, habitats, and ecosystems — was formally established as a discipline by Michael Soulé (University of California, San Die
ZB_5_26 — Mycorrhizal Networks: The Wood Wide Web and Underground Intelligence
Mycorrhizal networks — underground fungal hyphal systems that connect the roots of multiple plants — represent one of the most significant ecological discoveries of the past three decades. Suzanne Simard (University of B
ZB_5_21 — Lateral Gene Transfer: Horizontal Exchange and Evolutionary Implications
Lateral gene transfer (LGT), also called horizontal gene transfer (HGT), is the movement of genetic material between organisms by mechanisms other than vertical parent-to-offspring inheritance. First recognized in bacter
ZB_5_13 — Ecological Economics: Valuing Nature's Services
Ecological economics is a transdisciplinary field that treats the human economy as a subsystem embedded within — and fundamentally dependent upon — the finite biophysical systems of the Earth, challenging the neoclassica
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