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Alteration of Soybean Seedling Development in Darkness and Light by the Stay-green Mutation cytG and Gd1d2
- M. Canfield, J. Guiamet, L. Noodén
- Environmental Science
- 1 February 1995
TLDR
Exploring phenotypic plasticity and biogeography in emerald moths: A phylogeny of the genus Nemoria (Lepidoptera: Geometridae).
- M. Canfield, E. Greene, C. Moreau, N. Chen, N. Pierce
- BiologyMolecular phylogenetics and evolution
- 1 November 2008
The double cloak of invisibility: phenotypic plasticity and larval decoration in a geometrid moth, Synchlora frondaria, across three diet treatments
- M. Canfield, Sue Chang, N. Pierce
- Environmental Science
- 1 June 2009
TLDR
Facultative mimicry? The evolutionary significance of seasonal forms in several Indo-Australian butterflies in the family Pieridae.
- M. Canfield, N. Pierce
- Environmental Science
- 1 June 2010
TLDR
Field notes on science & nature
- M. Canfield
- Linguistics
- 31 January 2011
Contents Foreword Edward O. Wilson Introduction Michael R. Canfield 1. The Pleasure of Observing George B. Schaller 2. Untangling the Bank Bernd Heinrich 3. One and a Half Cheers for Listmaking Kenn…
Phenotypic plasticity and the semantics of polyphenism: a hisorical review and current perspectives.
- M. Canfield, E. Greene, D. Whitman, T. Ananthakrishnan
- Biology
- 2009
Developmental flexibility, phenotypic plasticity, and host plants: a case study with Nemoria caterpillars.
- E. Greene, M. Canfield, A. Ehmer, D. Whitman, T. Ananthakrishnan
- Biology
- 2009
THE SINGING REAPER: DIET, MORPHOLOGY AND VIBRATIONAL SIGNALING IN THE NEARCTIC SPECIES FENISECA TARQUINIUS (LEPIDOPTERA: LYCAENIDAE, MILETINAE)*
- J. Mathew, M. Travassos, M. Canfield, D. Murawski, R. Kitching, N. Pierce
- Biology
- 1 June 2008
A survey at fourteen sites in Eastern North America of populations of the carnivorous lycaenid butterfly, Feniseca tarquinius, confirmed that the sole prey item on Alnus rugosa (Betulaceae) for this…
Theodore Roosevelt in the Field
- M. Canfield
- History
- 16 November 2015
Never has there been a president less content to sit still behind a desk than Theodore Roosevelt. When we picture him, he's on horseback or standing at a cliff's edge or dressed for safari. And…