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1. Urban forest invertebrates: how they shape and respond to the urban environment

2. Non-structural carbohydrate concentrations in tree organs vary across biomes and leaf habits, but are independent of the fast-slow plant economic spectrum.

3. Global fine-resolution data on springtail abundance and community structure.

4. Young temperate tree species show different fine root acclimation capacity to growing season water availability.

5. Tree identity and diversity directly affect soil moisture and temperature but not soil carbon ten years after planting.

6. Reserve Accumulation Is Prioritized Over Growth Following Single or Combined Injuries in Three Common North American Urban Tree Species.

7. First record on the biology of Sarcophaga (Bulbostyla) (Diptera, Sarcophagidae).

8. Traits of litter-dwelling forest arthropod predators and detritivores covary spatially with traits of their resources.

9. Evergreenness influences fine root growth more than tree diversity in a common garden experiment.

10. On the development of a predictive functional trait approach for studying terrestrial arthropods.

11. Springtail community structure is influenced by functional traits but not biogeographic origin of leaf litter in soils of novel forest ecosystems.

12. The unseen invaders: introduced earthworms as drivers of change in plant communities in North American forests (a meta-analysis).

13. Consequences of biodiversity loss for litter decomposition across biomes.

14. An alpine treeline in a carbon dioxide-rich world: synthesis of a nine-year free-air carbon dioxide enrichment study.

15. Highly consistent effects of plant litter identity and functional traits on decomposition across a latitudinal gradient.

16. Growth and community responses of alpine dwarf shrubs to in situ CO₂ enrichment and soil warming.

17. Leaf traits and decomposition in tropical rainforests: revisiting some commonly held views and towards a new hypothesis.

18. The ecology of saprophagous macroarthropods (millipedes, woodlice) in the context of global change.

19. The importance of biotic factors in predicting global change effects on decomposition of temperate forest leaf litter.

20. Atmospheric CO 2 enrichment of alpine treeline conifers.

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