5 results match your criteria: "Central Queensland University Bundaberg[Affiliation]"

Estuarine organisms grow in highly heterogeneous habitats, and their genetic differentiation is driven by selective and neutral processes as well as population colonization history. However, the relative importance of the processes that underlie genetic structure is still puzzling. is a perennial grass almost limited in the Changjiang River estuary and its adjacent Qiantang River estuary.

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How Anticipated and Experienced Stigma Can Contribute to Self-Stigma: The Case of Problem Gambling.

Front Psychol

February 2017

Experimental Gambling Research Laboratory, School of Health, Medical and Applied Sciences, Central Queensland University Bundaberg, QLD, Australia.

The degree to which anticipated and experienced public stigma contribute to self-stigma remains open to debate, and little research has been conducted into the self-stigma of problem gambling. This study aimed to examine which aspects of anticipated and experienced stigma (if any) predict the anticipated level of public stigma associated with problem gambling and the degree of self-stigma felt by people experiencing problem gambling. An online survey of 177 Australians experiencing problem gambling examined whether aspects of the public characterization of problem gambling, anticipated reactions to problem gamblers, and experiences of devaluation and discrimination predicted anticipated level of public stigma and self-stigma.

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Phenotypic plasticity has been proposed as an important adaptive strategy for clonal plants in heterogeneous habitats. Increased phenotypic plasticity can be especially beneficial for invasive clonal plants, allowing them to colonize new environments even when genetic diversity is low. However, the relative importance of genetic diversity and phenotypic plasticity for invasion success remains largely unknown.

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