98 results on '"Higgins, Steven I."'
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2. Will trees or grasses profit from changing rainfall regimes in savannas?
3. Reassessment of the risks of climate change for terrestrial ecosystems
4. Winners and losers under past and future climate change
5. Limited climatic space for alternative ecosystem states in Africa
6. Publisher Correction: Shifts in vegetation activity of terrestrial ecosystems attributable to climate trends
7. Shifts in vegetation activity of terrestrial ecosystems attributable to climate trends
8. The global spectrum of plant form and function: enhanced species-level trait dataset
9. Tallo: A global tree allometry and crown architecture database
10. Abiotic site conditions affect photosynthesis rates by changing leaf functional traits
11. Transferability of correlative and process‐based species distribution models revisited: A response to Booth
12. The eco‐evolutionary significance of rainfall constancy for facultative CAM photosynthesis
13. Large uncertainties in future biome changes in Africa call for flexible climate adaptation strategies
14. Predictive ability of a process‐based versus a correlative species distribution model
15. Major contribution of grass roots to soil carbon pools and CO2 fluxes in a mesic savanna
16. Diversification in evolutionary arenas—Assessment and synthesis
17. An operational definition of the biome for global change research
18. Uncertainties of climate and CO2 impacts on carbon stocks and biome distribution in Africa
19. African biomes are most sensitive to changes in CO<sub>2</sub> under recent and near-future CO<sub>2</sub> conditions
20. Dynamic management needs for long‐lived, sporadically recruiting plant species in human‐dominated landscapes
21. Diversification is decoupled from biome fidelity: Acacia – a case study
22. African biomes are most sensitive to changes in CO2 under recent and near-future CO2 conditions
23. Water Limitation, Fire, and Savanna Persistence
24. Diversification in evolutionary arenas – assessment and synthesis
25. Grazing and aridity reduce perennial grass abundance in semi-arid rangelands – Insights from a trait-based dynamic vegetation model
26. African shrub distribution emerges via a trade-off between height and sapwood conductivity
27. The dimensionality of niche space allows bounded and unbounded processes to jointly influence diversification
28. The dimensions of species diversity
29. Effects of nutrient supply on carbon and water economies of C4 grasses
30. Comparison of four modeling tools for the prediction of potential distribution for non-indigenous weeds in the United States
31. Climate-biomes, pedo-biomes or pyro-biomes: which world view explains the tropical forest-savanna boundary in South America?
32. Stomatal traits relate to habitat preferences of herbaceous species in a temperate climate
33. Ecosystem Assembly: A Mission for Terrestrial Earth System Science
34. The future distribution of the savannah biome: model-based and biogeographic contingency
35. Defining functional biomes and monitoring their change globally
36. Allometric equations for integrating remote sensing imagery into forest monitoring programmes
37. Convergence among global biogeographical realms in the physiological niche of evergreen and deciduous vegetation
38. Revising the biome concept for understanding and predicting global change impacts
39. Feedback of trees on nitrogen mineralization to restrict the advance of trees in C4 savannahs
40. Potential impact of large ungulate grazers on African vegetation, carbon storage and fire regimes
41. Local density effects on individual production are dynamic: insights from natural stands of a perennial savanna grass
42. Three decades of multi-dimensional change in global leaf phenology
43. Plant Species Migration as a Key Uncertainty in Predicting Future Impacts of Climate Change on Ecosystems: Progress and Challenges
44. Intercontinental divergence in the climate envelope of major plant biomes
45. Climate change and long‐term fire management impacts on Australian savannas
46. Online appendix 1: Soil water retention curves for the major soil types of the Kruger National Park
47. Soil water retention curves for the major soil types of the Kruger National Park
48. Online appendix 2:Soil water retention curves for the major soil types of the Kruger National Park
49. Contrasting architecture of key African and Australian savanna tree taxa drives intercontinental structural divergence
50. Invasive plants have broader physiological niches
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