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WAGNER, F. H.; HÉRAULT, B.; BONAL, D.; STAHL, C.; ANDERSON, L. O.; BAKER, T. R.; BECKER, G. S.; BEECKMAN, H.; SOUZA, D. B.; BOTOSSO, P. C.; BOWMAN, D. M. J. S.; BRÄUNING, A.; BREDE, B.; BROWN, F. I.; CAMARERO, J. J.; CAMARGO, P. B.; CARDOSO, F. C. G.; CARVALHO, F. A.; CASTRO, W.; CHAGAS, R. K.; CHAVE, J.; CHIDUMAYO, E. N.; CLARK, D. A.; COSTA, F. R. C.; COURALET, C.; MAURICIO, P. H. da S.; DALITZ, H.; CASTRO, V. R. de; MILANI, J. E. de F.; OLIVEIRA, E. C. de; ARRUDA, L. de S.; DEVINEAU, JEAN-LOUIS; DREW, D. M.; DÜNISCH, O.; DURIGAN, G.; ELIFURAHA, E.; FEDELE, F.; FEDELE, L. F.; FIGUEIREDO FILHO, A.; FINGER, C. A. G.; FRANCO, A. C.; FREITAS JÚNIOR, J. L.; GALVÃO, F.; GEBREKIRSTOS, A.; GLINIARS, R.; GRAÇA, P. M. L. de A.; GRIFFITHS, A. D.; GROGAN, J.; GUAN, K.; HOMEIER, J.; KANIESKI, M. R.; KHO, L. K.; KOENIG, J.; KREPKOWSKI, J.; LEMOS-FILHO, J. P.; LIEBERMAN, D.; LIEBERMAN, M. E.; LISI, C. S.; SANTOS, T. L.; LÓPEZ AYALA, J. L.; MAEDA, E. E.; MALHI, Y.; MARIA, V. R. B.; MARQUES, M. C. M.; MARQUES, R.; CHAMBA, H. M.; MBWAMBO, L.; MELGAÇO, K. L. L.; MENDIVELSO, H. A.; MURPHY, B. P.; O’BRIEN, J. J.; OBERBAUER, S. F.; OKADA, N.; PÉLISSIER, R.; PRIOR, L. D.; ROIG, F. A.; ROSS, M.; ROSSATTO, D. R.; ROSSI, V.; ROWLAND, L.; RUTISHAUSER, E.; SANTANA, H.; SCHULZE, M.; SELHORST, D.; SILVA, W. R.; SILVEIRA, M.; SPANNL, S.; SWAINE, M. D.; TOLEDO, J. J.; TOLEDO, M. M.; TOLEDO, M.; TOMA. T.; TOMAZELLO FILHO, M.; VALDEZ HERNÁNDEZ, J. I.; VERBESSELT, J.; VIEIRA, S. A.; VINCENT, G.; CASTILHO, C. V. de; VOLLAND, F.; WORBES, M.; ZANON, M. L. B.; ARAGÃO, L. E. O. C.. |
The seasonal climate drivers of the carbon cy- cle in tropical forests remain poorly known, although these forests account for more carbon assimilation and storage than any other terrestrial ecosystem. Based on a unique combina- tion of seasonal pan-tropical data sets from 89 experimental sites (68 include aboveground wood productivity measure- ments and 35 litter productivity measurements), their asso- ciated canopy photosynthetic capacity (enhanced vegetation index, EVI) and climate, we ask how carbon assimilation and aboveground allocation are related to climate seasonal- ity in tropical forests and how they interact in the seasonal carbon cycle. We found that canopy photosynthetic capacity seasonality responds positively to precipitation when rain-... |
Tipo: Artigo de periódico |
Palavras-chave: Floresta tropical; Madeira; Carbono; Mudança Climática.; Tropical forests; Wood; Climate change; Carbon sinks. |
Ano: 2016 |
URL: http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1037530 |
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HACKET-PAIN, A.; FOEST, J. J.; PEARSE, I. S.; LAMONTAGNE, J. M.; KOENIG, W. D.; VACCHIANO, G.; BOGDZIEWICZ, M.; CAIGNARD, T.; CELEBIAS, P.; VAN DORMOLEN, J.; FERNANDEZ-MARTINEZ, M.; MORIS, J. V.; PALAGHIANU, C.; PESENDORFER, M.; SATAKE, A.; SCHERMER, E.; TANENTZAP, A. J.; THOMAS, P. A.; VECCHIO, D.; WION, A. P.; WOHLGEMUTH, T.; XUE, T. T.; ABERNETHY, K.; ACUNA, M. C. A.; BARRERA, M. D.; BARTON, J. H.; BOUTIN, S.; BUSH, E. R.; CALDERON, S. D.; CAREVIC, F. S.; CASTILHO, C. V. de; VAN MARLE, H. S.; PASTUR, G. M.; PATTERSON, T.; PERI, P. L.; PIECHNIK, L.; POURHASHEMI, M.; QUEZADA, C. E.; ROIG, F. A.; ROJAS, K. P.; ROSAS, Y. M.; SCHUELER, S.; SEGET, B.; SOLER, R.; STEELE, M. A.; TORO-MANRIQUEZ, M.; TUTIN, C. E. G.; UKIZINTAMBARA, T.; WHITE, L.; YADOK, B.; WILLIS, J. L.; ZOLLES, A.; ZYWIEC, M.; ASCOLI, D.; CELLINI, J. M.; CHAPMAN, C. A.; CHAPMAN, H.; CHIANUCCI, F.; COSTA, P. da; CROISE, L.; CUTINI, A.; DANTZER, B.; DEROSE, R. J.; DIKANGADISSI, J. T.; DIMOTO, E.; FONSECA, F. L. da; GALLO, L.; GRATZER, G.; GREENE, D. F.; HADAD, M. A.; HERRERA, A. H.; JEFFERY, K. J.; JOHNSTONE, J. F.; KALBITZER, U.; KANTOROWICZ, W.; KLIMAS, C. A.; LAGEARD, J. G. A.; LANE, J.; LAPIN, K.; LEDWON, M.; LEEPER, A. C.; LENCINAS, M. V.; LIRA-GUEDES, A. C.; LORDON, M. C.; MARCHELLI, P.; MARINO, S.; MCADAM, A. G.; MOMONT, L. R. W.; NICOLAS, M.; WADT, L. H. de O.; PANAHI, P.. |
Significant gaps remain in understanding the response of plant reproduction to environmental change. This is partly because measuring reproduction in long-lived plants requires direct observation over many years and such datasets have rarely been made publicly available. Here we introduce MASTREE+, a data set that collates reproductive time-series data from across the globe and makes these data freely available to the community. MASTREE+ includes 73,828 georeferenced observations of annual reproduction (e.g. seed and fruit counts) in perennial plant populations worldwide. These observations consist of 5971 population-level time-series from 974 species in 66 countries. The mean and median time-series length is 12.4 and 10 years respectively, and the data... |
Tipo: Artigo de periódico |
Palavras-chave: General flowering; Seed production; Demography; Flowering; Plant reproduction; Regeneration (biological). |
Ano: 2022 |
URL: http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1143250 |
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