How many critters can an island hold? Using digitized natural history collections to test real hypotheses about island biogeography
Author(s): Carly Jordan1, Janice Krumm2, Tiffany Marie Doan3, Jason Kilgore4, Debra Linton5
1. George Washington University 2. Widener University 3. New College of Florida 4. Washington & Jefferson College 5. Central Michigan University
979 total view(s), 546 download(s)
Summary:
Use digitized natural history specimen data from the Alexander Archipelago in Alaska to explore hypotheses about island biogeography. Reprinted from Proceedings of the Association for Biology Laboratory Education (2019).
Contents:
- IslandBiogeographyModule_Jordanetal2022.pdf(PDF | 625 KB)
- IslandBiogeographyModule_Jordanetal2022_editable.docx(DOCX | 541 KB)
- 2023UpdatedStudentHandout_IslandBiogeographyModule.pdf(PDF | 315 KB)
- 2023UpdatedStudentHandout_IslandBiogeographyModule.docx(DOCX | 437 KB)
- Association for Biology Laboratory Education- Abstract
- Arctos Database
- License terms
Supporting Docs
- IslandBiogeographyModule_Jordanetal2022.pdf(PDF | 625 KB)
- IslandBiogeographyModule_Jordanetal2022_editable.docx(DOCX | 541 KB)
- 2023UpdatedStudentHandout_IslandBiogeographyModule.pdf(PDF | 315 KB)
- 2023UpdatedStudentHandout_IslandBiogeographyModule.docx(DOCX | 437 KB)
- Association for Biology Laboratory Education- Abstract
- Arctos Database