Mostrando 10 resultados de: 19
Filtros aplicados
Publisher
Perspectives in Plant Ecology, Evolution and Systematics(2)
Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research(1)
Biological Conservation(1)
Botanical Review(1)
Data(1)
Área temáticas
Ecología(13)
Geología, hidrología, meteorología(8)
Economía de la tierra y la energía(4)
Factores que afectan al comportamiento social(3)
Plantas(3)
Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible
ODS 15: Vida de ecosistemas terrestres(19)
ODS 13: Acción por el clima(17)
ODS 17: Alianzas para lograr los objetivos(11)
ODS 6: Agua limpia y saneamiento(6)
ODS 2: Hambre cero(2)
Origen
google(3)
Biodiversity patterns and continental insularity in the tropical High Andes
ArticleAbstract: Alpine areas of the tropical Andes constitute the largest of all tropical alpine regions worldwide.Palabras claves:Autores:Anthelme F., Beck S.G., Dean Jacobsen, Macek P., Meneses R.I., Moret P., Olivier J. DanglesFuentes:scopusEcosystem sentinels for climate change? Evidence of wetland cover changes over the last 30 years in the tropical Andes
ArticleAbstract: While the impacts of climate change on individual species and communities have been well documentedPalabras claves:Autores:Anthelme F., Dean Jacobsen, Kraemer M., Olivier J. Dangles, Rabatel A., Soruco A., Zeballos G.Fuentes:scopusDisturbance and Resilience in Tropical American Palm Populations and Communities
ReviewAbstract: We review resilience to natural and anthropogenic disturbance of palm populations and communities inPalabras claves:ARECACEAE, Deforestation, gene flow, harvest, pollination, resilience, Seed dispersal, Tropical AmericaAutores:Anthelme F., Balslev H., Pintaud J.C., Rommel MontufarFuentes:googlescopusGlacial flood pulse effects on benthic fauna in equatorial high-Andean streams
ArticleAbstract: Equatorial glacier-fed streams present unique hydraulic patterns when compared to glacier-fed observPalabras claves:flood, glacier, Macroinvertebrate, Reynolds number, stream, tropicalAutores:Anthelme F., Calvez R., Cauvy-Fraunie S., Dean Jacobsen, Olivier J. Dangles, Patricio Andino Guarderas, Rodrigo EspinosaFuentes:scopusGlacier influence on bird assemblages in habitat islands of the high Bolivian Andes
ArticleAbstract: Aim: Climate projections for the upcoming decades predict a significant loss of ice mass particularlPalabras claves:Autores:Anthelme F., Cardenas T., Cauvy-Fraunie S., Gómez M.I., Landivar C.M., Meneses R.I., Naoki K., Olivier J. Dangles, Struelens Q.Fuentes:scopusHow anthropogenic disturbances affect the resilience of a keystone palm tree in the threatened Andean cloud forest?
ArticleAbstract: To conserve tropical forests, it is crucial to characterise the disturbance threshold beyond which pPalabras claves:Ceroxylon echinulatum, cloud forest, Deforestation, ECUADOR, facilitation, Selective loggingAutores:Anthelme F., Gully C., Lincango J., Nina Duarte, Rommel MontufarFuentes:scopusFacilitation among plants in alpine environments in the face of climate change
ReviewAbstract: While there is a large consensus that plant-plant interactions are a crucial component of the responPalabras claves:competition, Cushion plants, Early snowmelt, facilitation, Global warming, latitudinal gradient, Nurse plant, Stressgradient hypothesisAutores:Anthelme F., Cavieres L.A., Olivier J. DanglesFuentes:scopusFine nurse variations explain discrepancies in the stress-interaction relationship in alpine regions
ArticleAbstract: Despite a large consensus on increasing facilitation among plants with increasing stress in alpine rPalabras claves:Autores:Anthelme F., Meneses R.I., Olivier J. Dangles, Pozo P., Valero N.N.H.Fuentes:scopusExperimental support of the stress-gradient hypothesis in herbivore-herbivore interactions
ArticleAbstract: The stress-gradient hypothesis (SGH) postulates an increase in the frequency of positive species intPalabras claves:biotic stress, facilitation, Plant antagonists, Species interaction, Stress-gradient hypothesis (SGH)Autores:Anthelme F., Mario A. Herrera, Olivier J. DanglesFuentes:scopusLiving at the Edge: Increasing Stress for Plants 2–13 Years After the Retreat of a Tropical Glacier
ArticleAbstract: Rapid warming is a major threat for the alpine biodiversity but, at the same time, accelerated glaciPalabras claves:abiotic stress, Chronosequence, Dispersal limitation, facilitation, glacial retreat, plant height, primary succession, Tropical AndesAutores:Anthelme F., Cáceres B., Cauvy-Fraunie S., Francou B., Olivier J. DanglesFuentes:scopus