Search

Your search keyword '"Vitasse Y"' showing total 85 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Vitasse Y" Remove constraint Author: "Vitasse Y" Publication Year Range Last 50 years Remove constraint Publication Year Range: Last 50 years
85 results on '"Vitasse Y"'

Search Results

4. How Do Climate Change Experiments Alter Plot-Scale Climate?

5. European beech dieback after premature leaf senescence during the 2018 drought in northern Switzerland

8. Rôle des interactions plante-plante dans la réponse des forêts au changement climatique : l’exemple des forêts de chêne sessile et de hêtre dans les Pyrénées Occidentales

15. Stable water isotopes reveal the onset of bud dormancy in temperate trees, whereas water content is a better proxy for dormancy release.

16. Feasting on the ordinary or starving for the exceptional in a warming climate: Phenological synchrony between spongy moth ( Lymantria dispar ) and budburst of six European tree species.

17. Chronic warming and dry soils limit carbon uptake and growth despite a longer growing season in beech and oak.

18. Effect of climate warming on the timing of autumn leaf senescence reverses after the summer solstice.

19. Networking the forest infrastructure towards near real-time monitoring - A white paper.

20. Global warming is increasing the discrepancy between green (actual) and thermal (potential) seasons of temperate trees.

21. Linking human impacts to community processes in terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems.

23. Number of growth days and not length of the growth period determines radial stem growth of temperate trees.

24. Impact of microclimatic conditions and resource availability on spring and autumn phenology of temperate tree seedlings.

25. Phenological and elevational shifts of plants, animals and fungi under climate change in the European Alps.

26. Post-glacial re-colonization and natural selection have shaped growth responses of silver fir across Europe.

27. Chilled to be forced: the best dose to wake up buds from winter dormancy.

29. Assessing the Effectiveness of in-situ Active Warming Combined With Open Top Chambers to Study Plant Responses to Climate Change.

30. Climate warming increases spring phenological differences among temperate trees.

31. Late-spring frost risk between 1959 and 2017 decreased in North America but increased in Europe and Asia.

32. Shifts in the temperature-sensitive periods for spring phenology in European beech and pedunculate oak clones across latitudes and over recent decades.

34. Shortened temperature-relevant period of spring leaf-out in temperate-zone trees.

35. Contrasting resistance and resilience to extreme drought and late spring frost in five major European tree species.

36. Daylength helps temperate deciduous trees to leaf-out at the optimal time.

37. Short photoperiod reduces the temperature sensitivity of leaf-out in saplings of Fagus sylvatica but not in horse chestnut.

38. Daily Maximum Temperatures Induce Lagged Effects on Leaf Unfolding in Temperate Woody Species Across Large Elevational Gradients.

39. Unchanged risk of frost exposure for subalpine and alpine plants after snowmelt in Switzerland despite climate warming.

40. Vapor-pressure deficit and extreme climatic variables limit tree growth.

41. Global warming leads to more uniform spring phenology across elevations.

42. Asymmetric effects of cooler and warmer winters on beech phenology last beyond spring.

43. Frost hardening and dehardening potential in temperate trees from winter to budburst.

44. 'Hearing' alpine plants growing after snowmelt: ultrasonic snow sensors provide long-term series of alpine plant phenology.

45. Long-term linear trends mask phenological shifts.

46. Coordination between growth, phenology and carbon storage in three coexisting deciduous tree species in a temperate forest.

47. Fast acclimation of freezing resistance suggests no influence of winter minimum temperature on the range limit of European beech.

48. Declining global warming effects on the phenology of spring leaf unfolding.

49. Increased heat requirement for leaf flushing in temperate woody species over 1980-2012: effects of chilling, precipitation and insolation.

50. Unexpected role of winter precipitation in determining heat requirement for spring vegetation green-up at northern middle and high latitudes.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources