Community traits affect plant-plant interactions across climatic gradients
Published 2016 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Community traits affect plant-plant interactions across climatic gradients
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
OIKOS
Volume 126, Issue 2, Pages -
Publisher
Wiley
Online
2016-07-11
DOI
10.1111/oik.03376
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- A global meta-analysis of the relative extent of intraspecific trait variation in plant communities
- (2015) Andrew Siefert et al. ECOLOGY LETTERS
- Fitting Linear Mixed-Effects Models Usinglme4
- (2015) Douglas Bates et al. Journal of Statistical Software
- Novel competitors shape species’ responses to climate change
- (2015) Jake M. Alexander et al. NATURE
- Plant functional traits and the multidimensional nature of species coexistence
- (2015) Nathan J. B. Kraft et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Above- and belowground biotic interactions facilitate relocation of plants into cooler environments
- (2014) Marko J. Spasojevic et al. ECOLOGY LETTERS
- Concurrent biotic interactions influence plant performance at their altitudinal distribution margins
- (2014) Elina Kaarlejärvi et al. OIKOS
- Functional traits determine plant co-occurrence more than environment or evolutionary relatedness in global drylands
- (2014) Santiago Soliveres et al. PERSPECTIVES IN PLANT ECOLOGY EVOLUTION AND SYSTEMATICS
- Plant–plant interactions, environmental gradients and plant diversity: A global synthesis of community-level studies
- (2014) Santiago Soliveres et al. PERSPECTIVES IN PLANT ECOLOGY EVOLUTION AND SYSTEMATICS
- The ecology of differences: assessing community assembly with trait and evolutionary distances
- (2013) Marc Cadotte et al. ECOLOGY LETTERS
- Partitioning net interactions among plants along altitudinal gradients to study community responses to climate change
- (2013) Richard Michalet et al. FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY
- Functional traits predict relationship between plant abundance dynamic and long-term climate warming
- (2013) N. A. Soudzilovskaia et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- The role of biotic interactions in shaping distributions and realised assemblages of species: implications for species distribution modelling
- (2012) Mary Susanne Wisz et al. BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
- Competition depends more on the functional structure of plant community than on standing biomass
- (2012) M. Navas et al. COMMUNITY ECOLOGY
- Competitive interactions between forest trees are driven by species' trait hierarchy, not phylogenetic or functional similarity: implications for forest community assembly
- (2012) Georges Kunstler et al. ECOLOGY LETTERS
- A functional comparative approach to facilitation and its context dependence
- (2012) Bradley J. Butterfield et al. FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY
- Patterns of seed dispersal syndromes on serpentine soils: examining the roles of habitat patchiness, soil infertility and correlated functional traits
- (2012) Marko J. Spasojevic et al. Plant Ecology & Diversity
- Functional trait and phylogenetic tests of community assembly across spatial scales in an Amazonian forest
- (2010) Nathan J. B. Kraft et al. ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS
- Climate change effects on an endemic-rich edaphic flora: resurveying Robert H. Whittaker's Siskiyou sites (Oregon, USA)
- (2010) Ellen I. Damschen et al. ECOLOGY
- Refining the stress-gradient hypothesis for competition and facilitation in plant communities
- (2009) Fernando T. Maestre et al. JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY
- Ontogenetic shifts in interactions of two dominant shrub species in a semi-arid coastal sand dune system
- (2009) Cristina Armas et al. JOURNAL OF VEGETATION SCIENCE
- Intra- and interspecific performance in growth and reproduction increase with altitude: a case study with twoSaxifragaspecies from northern Spain
- (2008) Rubén Milla et al. FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY
Find Funding. Review Successful Grants.
Explore over 25,000 new funding opportunities and over 6,000,000 successful grants.
ExploreAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started