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Examples
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Back in 1995, my friend Bob Scammell of Red Deer, Alberta, published a fascinating little book called The Phenological Fly.
Fool’s Paradise John Gierach 2008
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Back in 1995, my friend Bob Scammell of Red Deer, Alberta, published a fascinating little book called The Phenological Fly.
Fool’s Paradise John Gierach 2008
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Back in 1995, my friend Bob Scammell of Red Deer, Alberta, published a fascinating little book called The Phenological Fly.
Fool’s Paradise John Gierach 2008
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Back in 1995, my friend Bob Scammell of Red Deer, Alberta, published a fascinating little book called The Phenological Fly.
Fool’s Paradise John Gierach 2008
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Phenological changes, species replacements, and changes at lower trophic levels are also likely to have a strong influence on upper trophic level species.
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Phenological changes reflect climate change in Wisconsin.
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Phenological responses to warming are greatest at cold sites in the high Arctic [57], whereas growth responses to warming are greatest at sites in the low Arctic.
Phenotypic responses of arctic species to changes in climate and ultraviolet-B radiation 2009
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Phenological development of spring barley in a short-season growing area.
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It took me only a few minutes to compare The Phenological Fly with the index in a guidebook to regional wildflowers and my own uncertain knowledge of hatches to learn that we have some of the same combinations here: western March browns and clematis, salmon flies and dog-woods, golden stoneflies and wild rose, green drakes and marsh marigolds.
Fool’s Paradise John Gierach 2008
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It took me only a few minutes to compare The Phenological Fly with the index in a guidebook to regional wildflowers and my own uncertain knowledge of hatches to learn that we have some of the same combinations here: western March browns and clematis, salmon flies and dog-woods, golden stoneflies and wild rose, green drakes and marsh marigolds.
Fool’s Paradise John Gierach 2008
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