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1. Assessing mowing intensity: A new index incorporating frequency, type of machinery, and technique

2. Monitoring fast‐moving animals—Building a customized camera system and evaluation toolset

3. A slow-fast trait continuum at the whole community level in relation to land-use intensification

4. The influence of habitat properties on sex determination in cavity-nesting Hymenoptera

5. Insect decline in forests depends on species’ traits and may be mitigated by management

6. Tree species and genetic diversity increase productivity via functional diversity and trophic feedbacks

7. What shapes ground beetle assemblages in a tree species-rich subtropical forest?

8. Evaluating the effectiveness of retention forestry to enhance biodiversity in production forests of Central Europe using an interdisciplinary, multi‐scale approach

9. Plagiolepis alluaudi Emery, 1894, a globally spreading exotic ant (Hymenoptera, Formicidae) newly recorded from Tenerife (Canary Islands, Spain)

10. Multiple plant diversity components drive consumer communities across ecosystems

11. Biodiversity across trophic levels drives multifunctionality in highly diverse forests

12. Systematics of the ant genus Proceratium Roger (Hymenoptera, Formicidae, Proceratiinae) in China – with descriptions of three new species based on micro-CT enhanced next-generation-morphology

13. Belowground top-down and aboveground bottom-up effects structure multitrophic community relationships in a biodiverse forest

14. Aenictus hoelldobleri sp. n., a new species of the Aenictus ceylonicus group (Hymenoptera, Formicidae) from China, with a key to the Chinese members of the group

15. A new species of the Aenictus wroughtonii group (Hymenoptera, Formicidae) from South-East China

16. Tree Species Richness Promotes Invertebrate Herbivory on Congeneric Native and Exotic Tree Saplings in a Young Diversity Experiment.

17. A unique nest-protection strategy in a new species of spider wasp.

22. Reduction of invertebrate herbivory by land use is only partly explained by changes in plant and insect characteristics

24. Carbon–biodiversity relationships in a highly diverse subtropical forest

26. Tripartite networks show that keystone species can multitask

27. Experiments are needed to quantify the main causes of insect decline

29. Tree species and genetic diversity increase productivity via functional diversity and trophic feedbacks

30. Species richness, functional traits and climate interactively affect tree survival in a large forest biodiversity experiment

31. What shapes ground beetle assemblages in a tree species-rich subtropical forest?

32. Tree diversity promotes predatory wasps and parasitoids but not pollinator bees in a subtropical experimental forest

34. Multi-trophic communities re-establish with canopy cover and microclimate in a subtropical forest biodiversity experiment

35. Canopy Closure Retards Fine Wood Decomposition in Subtropical Regenerating Forests

37. Rapid ant community reassembly in a <scp>N</scp> eotropical forest: Recovery dynamics and land‐use legacy

38. Unravelling insect declines: can space replace time?

39. Insect abundance in managed forests benefits from multi-layered vegetation

40. The Influence of Tree Diversity on Natural Enemies—a Review of the 'Enemies' Hypothesis in Forests

41. Host functional and phylogenetic composition rather than host diversity structure plant–herbivore networks

42. Diagnosing deficits in quality of life and providing tailored therapeutic options: Results of a randomised trial in 220 patients with colorectal cancer

43. Negative effects of forest gaps on dung removal in a full‐factorial experiment

45. Ecology: Mammals, interaction networks and the relevance of scale

46. Benchmarking nesting aids for cavity-nesting bees and wasps

47. Optimizing sampling of flying insects using a modified window trap

48. Plant composition, not richness, drives occurrence of specialist herbivores

49. Tree phylogenetic diversity structures multitrophic communities

50. Exotic garden plants partly substitute for native plants as resources for pollinators when native plants become seasonally scarce

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