Publications of the Institute
The Max Planck Institutes use the MPG.PuRe document server (repository) to record the publications of their scientists. The list is unfortunately only complete from the year 1998. It also contains all publications published at the former Schlitz River Station (Fluß-Station) from 1949 to its closing in 2007.
Journal Article (127)
1.
Journal Article
44 (2), pp. 179 - 201 (2001)
Review of the millipede genus Cylindrodesmus Pocock, 1889 (Diplopoda: Polydesmida: Haplodesmidae). Fragmenta Faunistica 2.
Journal Article
81 (1/2), pp. 133 - 145 (2001)
The type-material of the insect order Phasmatodea, described by Johann Jacob KAUP (Insecta, Phasmatodea). Senckenbergiana Biologica 3.
Journal Article
414 (6866), pp. 899 - 901 (2001)
Maternal control of resting-egg production in Daphnia. Nature 4.
Journal Article
15, pp. 127 - 128 (2001)
First observations on the survival strategies of terricolous arthropods in the northern Pantanal wetland of Brazil. Andrias 5.
Journal Article
268 (1484), pp. 2495 - 2501 (2001)
Cooperation through indirect reciprocity: image scoring or standing strategy? Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 6.
Journal Article
26 (2), pp. 167 - 179 (2001)
Niche separation in common prostome freshwater ciliates: the effect of food and temperature. Aquatic Microbial Ecology 7.
Journal Article
16 (3/4), pp. 303 - 311 (2001)
The prehistoric human geography of Brazil. Amazoniana: Limnologia et Oecologia Regionalis Systematis Fluminis Amazonas 8.
Journal Article
108 (4), pp. 879 - 889 (2001)
Abundance and phenology of Schizomida (Arachnida) from a secondary upland forest in Central Amazonia. Revue Suisse de Zoologie 9.
Journal Article
16 (3/4), pp. 609 - 646 (2001)
A paradigm to be discarded: Geological and paleoecological data falsify the HAFFER & PRANCE refuge hypothesis of Amazonian speciation. Amazoniana: Limnologia et Oecologia Regionalis Systematis Fluminis Amazonas 10.
Journal Article
16 (3/4), pp. 313 - 323 (2001)
Amazonian Chironomidae (Diptera, Chironomidae): A contribution to chironomid research in the Neotropics. Amazoniana: Limnologia et Oecologia Regionalis Systematis Fluminis Amazonas 11.
Journal Article
16 (3/4), pp. 325 - 336 (2001)
Agnurodesmus siolii n.sp., the first Cyrtodesmidae to be reported from Brazil, with remarks on the genus and family (Diplopoda, Polydesmida). Amazoniana: Limnologia et Oecologia Regionalis Systematis Fluminis Amazonas 12.
Journal Article
16 (3/4), pp. 337 - 348 (2001)
Holy Ganga and the mighty Amazon. Amazoniana: Limnologia et Oecologia Regionalis Systematis Fluminis Amazonas 13.
Journal Article
16 (3/4), pp. 579 - 607 (2001)
Climatic forcing of evolution in Amazonia during the Cenozoic: On the refuge theory of biotic differentiation. Amazoniana: Limnologia et Oecologia Regionalis Systematis Fluminis Amazonas 14.
Journal Article
16 (3/4), pp. 653 - 656 (2001)
The continuing debate on the history of the Amazonian rain forest - Scientific note. Amazoniana: Limnologia et Oecologia Regionalis Systematis Fluminis Amazonas 15.
Journal Article
16 (3/4), pp. 349 - 361 (2001)
New Neotropical species of the genera Clavilispinus, Aneucamptus, Thoracophorus, and Holotrochus (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae, Osoriinae). Amazoniana: Limnologia et Oecologia Regionalis Systematis Fluminis Amazonas 16.
Journal Article
15 (4), pp. 863 - 870 (2001)
Sources and fluxes of inorganic carbon in a deep, oligotrophic lake (Loch Ness, Scotland). Global Biogeochemical Cycles 17.
Journal Article
16 (3/4), pp. 285 - 297 (2001)
Appraisal of the scientific work of Harald Sioli. Amazoniana 18.
Journal Article
4 (4), pp. 437 - 451 (2001)
Freshwater fish habitats in Amazonia: state of knowledge, management, and protection. Aquatic Ecosystem Health and Management 19.
Journal Article
16 (3/4), pp. 363 - 395 (2001)
Amazonia 2000: An evaluation of three decades of regional planning and development programmes in the Brazilian Amazon region. Amazoniana: Limnologia et Oecologia Regionalis Systematis Fluminis Amazonas 20.
Journal Article
36 (3), pp. 205 - 210 (2001)
Arthropod biodiversity in the canopy of Vochysia divergens (Vochysiaceae), a forest dominant in the Brazilian Pantanal. Studies on Neotropical Fauna & Environment