
Carolina Levis
Articles
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Aug 1, 2024 |
science.org | Yangyang Zhu |Zuanning Yuan |Simon Dedman |Carolina Levis
Information & AuthorsInformationPublished In ScienceVolume 385 | Issue 67082 August 2024CopyrightCopyright © 2024 The Authors, some rights reserved; exclusive licensee American Association for the Advancement of Science. No claim to original U.S. Government Works. Article versionsSubmission historyPublished in print: 2 August 2024PermissionsRequest permissions for this article. AuthorsAffiliationsPrograma de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, Brazil.
One sixth of Amazonian tree diversity is dependent on river floodplains - Nature Ecology & Evolution
Mar 10, 2024 |
nature.com | Florian Wittmann |Rafael Assis |Aline Lopes |Rafael P. Salomão |Olaf Bánki |Carlos A. Peres | +68 more
AbstractAmazonia’s floodplain system is the largest and most biodiverse on Earth. Although forests are crucial to the ecological integrity of floodplains, our understanding of their species composition and how this may differ from surrounding forest types is still far too limited, particularly as changing inundation regimes begin to reshape floodplain tree communities and the critical ecosystem functions they underpin.
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Feb 14, 2024 |
nature.com | Bernardo Flores |Encarni Montoya |Boris Sakschewski |Nathália Nascimento |Arie Staal |Richard A. Betts | +8 more
AbstractThe possibility that the Amazon forest system could soon reach a tipping point, inducing large-scale collapse, has raised global concern1,2,3. For 65 million years, Amazonian forests remained relatively resilient to climatic variability. Now, the region is increasingly exposed to unprecedented stress from warming temperatures, extreme droughts, deforestation and fires, even in central and remote parts of the system1.
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