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1. Taxonomic implications of morphological complexity within the testate amoeba genus Corythion from the Antarctic Peninsula

2. Widespread Biological Response to Rapid Warming on the Antarctic Peninsula

3. Bryophytes as climate indicators: moss and liverwort photosynthetic limitations and carbon isotope signals in organic material and peat deposits

5. Spatially coherent late Holocene Antarctic Peninsula surface air temperature variability

6. Bryophyte gas-exchange dynamics along varying hydration status reveal a significant carbonyl sulphide (COS) sink in the dark and COS source in the light

7. Taxonomic implications of morphological complexity within the testate amoeba genus Corythion from the Antarctic Peninsula

8. Assimilate, process and analyse thermal dissipation sap flow data using the TREXrpackage

9. Stable isotope signals provide seasonal climatic markers for moss functional groups.

10. Leaf water δ 18 O reflects water vapour exchange and uptake by C 3 and CAM epiphytic bromeliads in Panama.

11. Bryophyte stable isotope composition, diversity and biomass define tropical montane cloud forest extent.

12. Taxonomic Implications of Morphological Complexity Within the Testate Amoeba Genus Corythion from the Antarctic Peninsula.

13. Bryophyte gas-exchange dynamics along varying hydration status reveal a significant carbonyl sulphide (COS) sink in the dark and COS source in the light.

14. Widespread Biological Response to Rapid Warming on the Antarctic Peninsula.

15. Electrical output of bryophyte microbial fuel cell systems is sufficient to power a radio or an environmental sensor.

16. Moss stable isotopes (carbon-13, oxygen-18) and testate amoebae reflect environmental inputs and microclimate along a latitudinal gradient on the Antarctic Peninsula.

17. Invited review: climate change impacts in polar regions: lessons from Antarctic moss bank archives.

18. Plants and soil microbes respond to recent warming on the Antarctic Peninsula.

19. Temporal separation between CO2 assimilation and growth? Experimental and theoretical evidence from the desiccation-tolerant moss Syntrichia ruralis.

20. Carbon isotope evidence for recent climate-related enhancement of CO 2 assimilation and peat accumulation rates in Antarctica.

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