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List of works by Emma-Liina Marjakangas

A database and synthesis of euglossine bee assemblages collected at fragrance baits

scientific article published in 2020

ATLANTIC BATS: a dataset of bat communities from the Atlantic Forests of South America.

scientific article published on 6 September 2017

Co-occurrences of tropical trees in eastern South America: disentangling abiotic and biotic forces

scientific article published on 27 May 2021

Dead wood profile of a semi-natural boreal forest - implications for sampling

scientific article

Ecological barriers mediate spatiotemporal shifts of bird communities at a continental scale

scientific article published on 30 May 2023

Effects of diversity on thermal niche variation in bird communities under climate change

scientific article published in 2022

Estimating interaction credit for trophic rewilding in tropical forests

scientific article published on 22 October 2018

Fragmented tropical forests lose mutualistic plant–animal interactions

scientific article published on 17 November 2019

Identifying ‘climate keystone species’ as a tool for conserving ecological communities under climate change

scientific article published on 25 August 2023

Local colonisations and extinctions of European birds are poorly explained by changes in climate suitability

scientific article published on 20 July 2023

Pathways towards a sustainable future envisioned by early‐career conservation researchers

scientific article

Short-lived species move uphill faster under climate change

scientific article published in April 2022

Temperature niche composition change inside and outside protected areas under climate warming

scientific article published in 2023

Trait‐based Inference of Ecological Network Assembly: A Conceptual Framework and Methodological Toolbox

scientific article published in 2022

Trait‐based inference of ecological network assembly: A conceptual framework and methodological toolbox

scientific article

Wintering bird communities are tracking climate change faster than breeding communities

scientific article