Climate change manipulations show Antarctic flora is more strongly affected by elevated nutrients than water
暂无分享,去创建一个
Sharon A. Robinson | Catherine E. Lovelock | S. Robinson | C. Lovelock | J. Wasley | M. Popp | Jane Wasley | Marianne Popp
[1] W. Oechel,et al. Widespread foliage δ15N depletion under elevated CO2: inferences for the nitrogen cycle , 2003 .
[2] W. Rice. ANALYZING TABLES OF STATISTICAL TESTS , 1989, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution.
[3] Johanna D. Turnbull,et al. Impact of changes in natural ultraviolet radiation on pigment composition, physiological and morphological characteristics of the Antarctic moss, Grimmia antarctici , 2005 .
[4] F. Chapin,et al. AND OBSERVED CHANGES IN CLIMATE , 1995 .
[5] D. Robinson. δ15N as an integrator of the nitrogen cycle , 2001 .
[6] D. R. Melick,et al. Phytogeography of bryophyte and lichen vegetation in the Windmill Islands, Wilkes Land, Continental Antarctica , 2004, Vegetatio.
[7] S. K. Rice,et al. The influence of water content and leaf anatomy on carbon isotope discrimination and photosynthesis in Sphagnum , 1996 .
[8] Sharon A. Robinson,et al. Some like it wet - biological characteristics underpinning tolerance of extreme water stress events in Antarctic bryophytes. , 2006, Functional plant biology : FPB.
[9] J. Mather,et al. Polar snow cover changes and global warming , 1997 .
[10] F. Stuart Chapin,et al. THE RESPONSE OF TUNDRA PLANT BIOMASS, ABOVEGROUND PRODUCTION, NITROGEN, AND CO2 FLUX TO EXPERIMENTAL WARMING , 1998 .
[11] R. Seppelt,et al. Seasonal Investigations of Soluble Carbohydrates and Pigment Levels in Antarctic Bryophytes and Lichens , 1994 .
[12] R. J. Porra,et al. Determination of accurate extinction coefficients and simultaneous equations for assaying chlorophylls a and b extracted with four different solvents: verification of the concentration of chlorophyll standards by atomic absorption spectroscopy , 1989 .
[13] M. Moran. Arguments for rejecting the sequential Bonferroni in ecological studies , 2003 .
[14] P. Rothery,et al. Factors causing the limitation of growth of terrestrial algae in maritime Antarctica during late summer , 1992, Polar Biology.
[15] P. Convey,et al. Seasonal periodicity of physical factors, inorganic nutrients and microalgae in Antarctic fellfields , 2003, Polar Biology.
[16] A. Tatur,et al. SOILS AND VEGETATION IN ABANDONED PENGUIN ROOKERIES (MARITIME ANTARCTIC) , 1989 .
[17] T. Green,et al. The Relationship between Electron Transport Rate Through PS II and CO2 Gas Exchange in Antarctic Cryptogams , 1995 .
[18] Sharon A. Robinson,et al. Living on the edge – plants and global change in continental and maritime Antarctica , 2003 .
[19] P. Broady. Broadscale patterns in the distribution of aquatic and terrestrial vegetation at three ice-free regions on Ross Island, Antarctica , 1989, Hydrobiologia.
[20] Terry V. Callaghan,et al. Long‐term ecosystem level experiments at Toolik Lake, Alaska, and at Abisko, Northern Sweden: generalizations and differences in ecosystem and plant type responses to global change , 2004 .
[21] E. Heegaard,et al. Effects of Simulated Environmental Changes on Growth and Growth Form in a Late Snowbed Population of Pohlia wahlenbergii (Web. et Mohr) Andr , 2003 .
[22] V. Smith. Effect of nutrients on CO2 assimilation by mosses on a sub-Antarctic island , 1993 .
[23] Sharon A. Robinson,et al. Ultraviolet B screening potential is higher in two cosmopolitan moss species than in a co‐occurring Antarctic endemic moss: implications of continuing ozone depletion , 2006 .
[24] J. Wasley. The effect of climate change on Antarctic terrestrial flora , 2004 .
[25] K Maxwell,et al. Chlorophyll fluorescence--a practical guide. , 2000, Journal of experimental botany.
[26] J. Raven,et al. Stable carbon isotope discrimination measurements in Sphagnum and other bryophytes: physiological and ecological implications , 1992 .
[27] F. Stuart Chapin,et al. Responses of Arctic Tundra to Experimental and Observed Changes in Climate , 1995 .
[28] W. Stock,et al. On the uptake of ornithogenic products by plants on the inland mountains of Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica, using stable isotopes , 1998, Polar Biology.
[29] C. Osmond,et al. Photoinhibition in the Antarctic moss Grimmia antarctici Card when exposed to cycles of freezing and thawing , 1995 .
[30] Walter Slavin,et al. Atomic absorption spectroscopy , 1968 .
[31] I. Newton,et al. Bird effects on organic processes in soils from five microhabitats on a nunatak with and without breeding snow petrels in Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica , 1998, Polar Biology.
[32] R. Seppelt,et al. Vegetation Patterns in Relation to Climatic and Endogenous Changes in Wilkes Land, Continental Antarctica , 1997 .
[33] P. Ryan,et al. The influence of physical factors and ornithogenic products on plant and arthropod abundance at an Inland Nunatak group in Antarctica , 1989, Polar Biology.
[34] F. Stuart Chapin,et al. Detecting changes in arctic tundra plant communities in response to warming over decadal time scales , 2004 .
[35] A. D. Kennedy. Water as a Limiting Factor in the Antarctic Terrestrial Environment: A Biogeographical Synthesis , 1993 .
[36] T. Callaghan,et al. HOW WILL EUROPEAN ARCTIC ECOSYSTEMS RESPOND TO PROJECTED GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE , 1998 .
[37] S. Jonasson. Plant responses to fertilization and species removal in tundra related to community structure and clonality. , 1992 .
[38] R. Seppelt,et al. Exposure and Nutrients As Delimiters of Lichen Communities in Continental Antarctica , 1995, The Lichenologist.
[39] R. Smith,et al. Classification and ordination of cryptogamic communities in Wilkes Land, Continental Antarctica , 1988, Vegetatio.
[40] P. Hietz,et al. Stable isotopic composition of carbon and nitrogen and nitrogen content in vascular epiphytes along an altitudinal transect , 1999 .
[41] T. Callaghan,et al. PLANT COMMUNITY RESPONSES TO SIMULATED ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE AT A HIGH ARCTIC POLAR SEMI-DESERT , 1998 .
[42] A. E. Greenberg,et al. Standard methods for the examination of water and wastewater : supplement to the sixteenth edition , 1988 .
[43] C. Lovelock,et al. Reversible Photoinhibition in Antarctic Moss during Freezing and Thawing , 1995, Plant physiology.
[44] A. Pentecost,et al. Does nitrogen deposition affect soil microfungal diversity and soil N and P dynamics in a high Arctic ecosystem? , 2004 .
[45] Terry V. Callaghan,et al. Global change and arctic ecosystems: is lichen decline a function of increases in vascular plant biomass? , 2001 .
[46] T. Green,et al. An assessment of the relationship between chlorophyll a fluorescence and CO2 gas exchange from field measurements on a moss and lichen , 1998, Planta.
[47] T. Callaghan,et al. Responses of a subarctic dwarf shrub heath community to simulated environmental change , 1998 .
[48] J. P. Grime,et al. Effects of simulated long‐term climatic change on the bryophytes of a limestone grassland community , 2005 .
[49] D. Whitehead,et al. The contribution of bryophytes to the carbon exchange for a temperate rainforest , 2003 .
[50] M. Leishman,et al. Vegetation abundance and diversity in relation to soil nutrients and soil water content in Vestfold Hills, East Antarctica , 2001, Antarctic Science.
[51] M. Schidlowski,et al. Stable Carbon Isotope Fractionation in Lower Plants from the Schirmacher and Untersee Oases (Central Dronning Maud Land, East Antarctica) , 1993 .
[52] F. Chapin. Direct and indirect effects of temperature on arctic plants , 1983, Polar Biology.
[53] U. Molau,et al. Responses of subarctic-alpine plant communities to simulated environmental change : Biodiversity of bryophytes, lichens, and vascular plants , 1998 .
[54] M. Bret-Harte,et al. Vegetation responses in Alaskan arctic tundra after 8 years of a summer warming and winter snow manipulation experiment , 2005 .
[55] I. Goodwin. Holocene Deglaciation, Sea-Level Change, and the Emergence of the Windmill Islands, Budd Coast, Antarctica , 1993, Quaternary Research.
[56] J. Anderson,et al. Decomposition in Terrestrial Ecosystems , 1979 .
[57] S. Robinson,et al. Desiccation tolerance of three moss species from continental Antarctica , 2000 .