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1. Scavenging in two mountain ecosystems: Distinctive contribution of ants in grassland and non‐ant invertebrates in forest.

2. Conflation of reforestation with restoration is widespread.

3. Grazing lawns and overgrazing in frequently grazed grass communities.

4. The response of ants to climate change.

5. Mammalian herbivore movement into drought refugia has cascading effects on savanna insect communities.

6. Droughts Decouple African Savanna Grazers from Their Preferred Forage with Consequences for Grassland Productivity.

7. Anthropogenic modifications to fire regimes in the wider Serengeti‐Mara ecosystem.

8. Thermoregulatory traits combine with range shifts to alter the future of montane ant assemblages.

9. Continent‐level drivers of African pyrodiversity.

10. GlobalAnts: a new database on the geography of ant traits (Hymenoptera: Formicidae).

11. Tropical grassy biomes: linking ecology, human use and conservation.

12. Density-body mass relationships: Inconsistent intercontinental patterns among termite feeding-groups.

13. Testing the context dependence of ant nutrient preference across habitat strata and trophic levels in Neotropical biomes.

14. Tropical grassy biomes: misunderstood, neglected, and under threat.

15. Biodiversity variability across elevations in the Carpathians: Parallel change with landscape openness and land use.

16. Does Structural Complexity Determine the Morphology of Assemblages? An Experimental Test on Three Continents

17. Cascading biodiversity and functional consequences of a global change-induced biome switch.

18. The discovery-dominance trade-off is the exception, rather than the rule.

19. Beyond the forest edge: Ecology, diversity and conservation of the grassy biomes

20. Termites and fire: Current understanding and future research directions for improved savanna conservation.

21. Dominant ants can control assemblage species richness in a South African savanna.

22. Fire resilience of ant assemblages in long-unburnt savanna of northern Australia.

23. A preliminary investigation of temporal patterns in semiarid ant communities: Variation with habitat type.

24. Contrasting fire-related resilience of ecologically dominant ants in tropical savannas of northern Australia.

25. Patch Mosaic Burning for Biodiversity Conservation: a Critique of the Pyrodiversity Paradigm.

26. Constraint and Competition in Assemblages: A Cross-Continental and Modeling Approach for Ants.

27. Response of African savanna ants to long-term fire regimes.

28. Burning issues for conservation: A critique of faunal fire research in Southern Africa.

29. Termites promote soil carbon and nitrogen depletion: Results from an in situ macrofauna exclusion experiment, Peru.

30. Unpacking the impoverished nature of secondary forests.

31. Functional compensation in a savanna scavenger community.

32. Small‐scale fires interact with herbivore feedbacks to create persistent grazing lawn environments.

33. The impact of invertebrate decomposers on plants and soil.

34. Geographical variation in ant foraging activity and resource use is driven by climate and net primary productivity.

35. Interspecific competition between ants and African honeybees (Apis mellifera scutellata) may undermine the effectiveness of elephant beehive–deterrents in Africa.

36. Fire-driven animal evolution in the Pyrocene.

37. The costs and benefits of decentralization and centralization of ant colonies.

38. The biogeography of Gabonese savannas: Evidence from termite community richness and composition.

39. Woody encroachment slows decomposition and termite activity in an African savanna.

40. The underestimated biodiversity of tropical grassy biomes.

41. Ecological strategies of (pl)ants: Towards a world‐wide worker economic spectrum for ants.

42. Indirect control of decomposition by an invertebrate predator.

43. What do you mean, 'megafire'?

44. Termite sensitivity to temperature affects global wood decay rates.

45. The global distribution of known and undiscovered ant biodiversity.

46. Savanna ant species richness is maintained along a bioclimatic gradient of increasing latitude and decreasing rainfall in northern Australia.

47. Savanna ant species richness is maintained along a bioclimatic gradient of increasing latitude and decreasing rainfall in northern Australia.

48. Fire-adapted traits in animals.

49. Termites have wider thermal limits to cope with environmental conditions in savannas.

50. Fire ecology for the 21st century: Conserving biodiversity in the age of megafire.

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