コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)
通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 terranean) and land uses (arable, forest and grassland).
2 season) and habitat terms (woodland, scrub, grassland).
3 hat assemble after destruction of old-growth grasslands).
4 e key indicators for restoration of degraded grassland.
5 grass, transitional, and shrub in a coastal grassland.
6 d and woodland proliferate at the expense of grassland.
7 s enhance coexistence in a California annual grassland.
8 rming and nitrogen deposition in a temperate grassland.
9 es, from mixed conifer forest to high-desert grassland.
10 arity on community assembly in the semi-arid grassland.
11 s, being concentrated in the top 10 cm under grassland.
12 nt negative predictor, increased in restored grassland.
13 intensity gradients for 150 forests and 150 grasslands.
14 m and sugar limitation across North American grasslands.
15 rol soil C persistence in arid and semi-arid grasslands.
16 modularity and evenness were more evident in grasslands.
17 E. sphaerocephalus in semi-natural European grasslands.
18 val reduced diversity in naturally assembled grasslands.
19 t response to anthropogenic perturbations in grasslands.
20 long the spatial gradient from arid to mesic grasslands.
21 climate change, we expect reduction of Stipa grasslands.
22 he "water-savings effect" usually invoked in grasslands.
23 derness and current connectivity to mountain grasslands.
24 st plants and butterflies in 561 seminatural grasslands.
25 wing seasons in regulating soil C release in grasslands.
26 est them using a survey of 53 North American grasslands.
27 ion, particularly with regard to grasses and grasslands.
28 bility and nutrient enrichment than ungrazed grasslands.
29 cidate the effect of soil pH on P cycling in grasslands.
30 ided conversion (11%), compost amendments to grasslands (9%), and wetland and grassland restoration (
34 oductivity for 243 plant communities from 42 grasslands across the globe and quantify the effect of c
35 and work to elevate the status of old-growth grasslands, alongside old-growth forests, in the public
36 d tropical grasslands, mangroves and montane grasslands also have <1% of land identified as very low
38 d plant diversity in a California serpentine grassland and found that many plant species flowered ear
42 nitrogen losses were substantial in savanna grasslands and broadleaf forests, but not in temperate a
43 t ants and other consumers across a range of grasslands and climate vary significantly in the demand
44 oric periods of sand deposition in semi-arid grasslands and external climatic conditions, land use pr
47 d States has caused widespread conversion of grasslands and other ecosystems with largely unknown con
48 s decoupled from functional diversity, e.g., grasslands and rhizospheres were the most diverse biomes
49 versity and productivity over 37 years in 21 grasslands and savannahs with known agricultural land-us
50 t species of large herbivores (ungulates) in grasslands and savannas has fascinated ecologists for de
52 s aboveground and belowground communities of grasslands and their mediated carbon (C) and nitrogen (N
53 rised of cold (e.g., boreal forests, montane grasslands and tundra) or arid (e.g., deserts) landscape
54 evaluate SOC and nitrogen (N) dynamics under grasslands and winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L)-based
58 lined from natural forest to planted forest, grassland, and perennial cropland for most soil inverteb
59 nt land cover, we show that existing forest, grassland, and shrubland vegetation take up a significan
60 s to explain fire and ecosystem responses in grasslands, and how these may be understood and prioriti
65 sistent positive asymmetry, whilst (natural) grasslands appear to have transitioned from positive to
68 In light of these results, the view that all grasslands are weedy communities, trapped by fire and la
69 00-fold shifts in the biomass of four common grassland arthropod taxa-Auchenorrhyncha, sucking herbiv
70 t that ecologists should explicitly consider grassland assembly time and endogenous disturbance regim
71 ed from intact, degraded and restored alpine grasslands at altitudes ranging between 3,900 and 4,200
74 from two of the largest and longest-running grassland biodiversity experiments (the Jena Experiment
75 poral stability (mean/standard deviation) of grassland biomass production and the plant diversity-sta
77 all, these experimental results suggest that grassland biomass will outstrip wild herbivore control a
79 ere we analyse data from 48 sites in savanna grasslands, broadleaf forests and needleleaf forests spa
80 duction sites for regal fritillary and other grassland butterflies and actions to promote the re-esta
81 y N addition suppresses CH(4) sink in global grassland by 11.4% and concurrent N and P deposition all
82 We quantified this interaction in native grassland by experimentally eliminating temporal variabi
83 mechanistic insights into the sensitivity of grassland carbon stocks to nutrient enrichment can facil
84 d small mammal communities in arid and mesic grasslands changed in response to increasing aridity and
85 o ecotones) of the southwestern U.S. (Plains grassland, Chihuahuan Desert grassland, and Chihuahuan D
86 zation - in 27 coexisting species from three grassland communities along a precipitation gradient.
87 on the ANPP response of perennial C(3) /C(4) grassland communities to a subambient to elevated CO(2)
89 ed data from 12 seed addition experiments in grassland communities to examine the influence of reduci
90 icated field experiment where entire montane grassland communities were transplanted in the direction
92 19-y decline of phylogenetic diversity in a grassland community as moisture became less abundant and
95 mental policymakers to prioritize old-growth grassland conservation and work to elevate the status of
97 ts gradients of food web structure across 54 grasslands, consistent with multiple hypotheses of botto
101 onverting 70-100% of these croplands to idle grassland (cost: $35.7B-50B) is required to achieve the
102 The SOM mineralization rate decreased with grassland degradation and increased after long-term (>10
103 of net ecosystem productivity in a semi-arid grassland despite whether temperature, precipitation and
104 udies (<=3 years) in both cold and temperate grasslands disappeared in longer-term experiments (>3 ye
106 as larger close to areas containing tropical grasslands during the last glacial maximum, which are po
108 results demonstrate that fire 'reboots' the grassland ecosystem by differentially regulating plant a
109 w of the effects of global change drivers on grassland ecosystem carbon cycling and highlight a cruci
110 microbial respiration (Q(10)) in a temperate grassland ecosystem persistently decreases by 12.0 +/- 3
113 soil acidification have greatly increased in grassland ecosystems due to increased industrial and agr
114 grazers that are also capable of engineering grassland ecosystems make some of the world's most impre
116 experimental warming stimulated C fluxes in grassland ecosystems with regard to both plant productio
118 ven plant species that co-occur in temperate grassland ecosystems, we thus investigated the effect of
121 both in terms of the biome type (wooded vs. grassland environments) and the density of the vegetatio
124 combined influence of Plio-Pleistocene C(4) grassland expansion and pulses of aridity after ~1 Ma.
127 ontext of invasion and drought in California grasslands, exploring whether invasives show greater gro
128 tuating temperature, plant-soil feedbacks in grasslands, facilitation in a beach grass community, and
132 e predators, and vertebrate predators) in 75 grassland fields with a broad range of land-use historie
136 on intervals) in terrestrial ecosystem (i.e. grasslands, forests, shrublands, tundra and croplands).
140 0-10 and 10-20 cm depths from an undisturbed grassland (GP), winter wheat-pea (Pisum sativum L) rotat
141 distribution range, specialized diet or dry grassland habitat were more likely than others to disapp
142 physical properties, we argued that alfalfa grassland had the advantage to promote soil quality comp
144 grasslands and savannas-hereafter old-growth grasslands-have long been viewed by scientists and envir
145 eater plant species diversity than secondary grasslands (i.e., herbaceous communities that assemble a
147 surements with data that we collected over a grassland in Oklahoma and a pine forest in Colorado to d
148 and under an oak savanna and over an annual grassland in the Mediterranean climate of California, US
153 ovariance towers over co-located forests and grasslands in the temperate eastern United States, where
154 les (n = 160) collected at flat, undisturbed grasslands in Western Europe in the framework of a harmo
156 icantly across cold, temperate and semi-arid grasslands, in that responses for most C fluxes were lar
157 of the forests is 1-2 degrees C cooler than grasslands, indicating a substantial cooling effect of r
161 , zebras can forage in large patches of open grasslands located near waterholes where they can also e
162 rted 37% fewer plant species than old-growth grasslands (log response ratio = -0.46) and that seconda
164 ly simpler biocrusts in blue grama-dominated grassland maintained biomass, only suffering diversity l
165 F diversity on a plot scale (10 x 10 m) in a grassland managed at low intensity in southwest Germany.
166 drivers known to impact biodiversity, e.g., grassland management and current landscape composition.
168 influence across most datasets, and tropical grasslands, mangroves and montane grasslands also have <
170 ucted investigations in a wet meadow (WM), a grassland meadow (GM), a moderately degraded meadow (MDM
172 igher in landscapes containing old permanent grasslands, most likely because they offer a stable and
180 iment in a high-altitude (4600 m asl) alpine grassland on the Tibetan Plateau to explore the effects
181 act of active restoration of degraded alpine grassland on: (a) soil organic matter (SOM) mineralizati
185 heir availability within the territory, with grassland, open woodland and dense thicket being favoure
186 llowed us to determine ideal habitat ratios (grassland:open woodland:low shrubland of 1.00:6.10:0.09
187 tively, compared to their native vegetation (grassland or woodland) pairs, and irrigated croplands ha
188 ific indicators of land use (arable, forest, grasslands) or soil conditions (pH, organic C, texture).
189 foundation for predicting future patterns in grassland organism nutritional ecology as plant species
190 In the context of the expansion of savanna grasslands, our results represent a resource-rich mosaic
191 ounded by more favorable land covers such as grassland, pasture, conservation land, and fallow fields
192 ent (250 to 500 uL L(-1)) for eight years to grassland plant communities on soils from different land
194 ng-term changes in growth patterns in alpine grassland plant communities, and suggest that earlier ph
196 e find that restoration of late-successional grassland plant diversity leads to accelerating annual c
197 t, where 50 non-resident (but mostly native) grassland plant species were sown into savannah plots, w
198 ese predictions by growing native California grassland plants in competition with nonnative Lactuca s
200 e, positive influence of CO(2) enrichment on grassland productivity that resulted from the direct phy
202 ed a 4 yr manipulative experiment to explore grassland response to heavy rainfall imposed in either t
204 community assembly mechanism(s) drive(s) the grassland restoration in semi-arid region, we investigat
207 In particular, the retention of permanent grassland sanctuaries within intensive landscapes may of
208 iversity and structure of AMF communities in grasslands, savannas, dry forests and miombo in a protec
213 rge-seeded species most strongly affected in grasslands (smallest seeds), and relatively small-seeded
216 20 proteomic data sets from a Mediterranean grassland soil ecosystem and recovered 793 near-complete
218 forest soils (2.43) and the lowest found for grassland soils (1.67) and significantly increased with
222 that in a warmer and drier future fertilized grassland soils will have an even more limited potential
228 shouse experiment consisting of 21 temperate grassland species grown under three different environmen
232 m structure worldwide, such that savanna and grassland states determined by fire or grazing can be co
234 t is unclear if such findings from temperate grassland studies similarly pertain to warmer ecosystems
238 as been no global test of whether old-growth grasslands support greater plant species diversity than
239 , emerging research suggests that old-growth grasslands support substantial biodiversity and are slow
240 ints on six continents, found that secondary grasslands supported 37% fewer plant species than old-gr
241 increased winter snowfall may stabilize arid grassland systems by reducing resource competition, prom
242 esults indicate that the vegetation in these grassland systems is not very sensitive to the range of
244 c mean diameter were significantly higher in grassland than those of the arable and forest land.
246 ffect soil net N(min) across a wide range of grasslands that vary in soil and climatic properties.
247 gradients-from mangroves to tropical alpine grasslands-that are unmatched in the Asia-Pacific region
248 hesize yield responses to P fertilisation in grasslands, the most common type of agricultural land, t
252 e responses of 128 components of a subarctic grassland to either 5-8 or >50 years of soil warming.
254 tential for conversion of arable cropland to grassland to sequester carbon in the short to medium ter
255 is shift in plant community composition from grassland to shrub thicket alters the role of barrier is
256 density revealed that intense grazing caused grasslands to green up faster, more intensely, and for a
257 in field plots at arid, semiarid, and mesic grasslands to investigate temporal and spatial precipita
258 nnuals commonly found in southern California grasslands to reproductive maturity under both well-wate
261 se standardized surveys of 54 North American grasslands to test alternate hypotheses predicting 100-f
264 fluxes to experimental warming across three grassland types (cold, temperate, and semi-arid), warmin
266 g response ratio = -0.46) and that secondary grasslands typically require at least a century, and mor
267 pecific community composition in a semi-arid grassland under long-term simulation of six different ra
269 nship between grazing and plant diversity in grasslands under variable intensities of grazing pressur
270 s to mammalian herbivore exclusion across 22 grasslands, under ambient and elevated nutrient availabi
272 oveground net primary productivity (ANPP) of grassland vegetation, but the magnitude of the ANPP-CO(2
274 to global terrestrial C fluxes, and to date grassland warming experiments provide the opportunity to
275 rassland was microbial biomass, for degraded grassland was basal microbial respiration, and for resto
276 predictive factor of CO(2) -Q(10) for intact grassland was microbial biomass, for degraded grassland
278 conducting a field experiment in a temperate grassland, we found that both plant richness and tempora
279 easonal biomass dynamics of a Tibetan alpine grassland, we show that climate change promoted both ear
280 porative water use by the savanna and annual grassland were relatively decoupled from the booms and b
282 creased over decades to centuries, secondary grasslands were still missing characteristic old-growth
285 tions was more evident in the Tibetan alpine grasslands where P limitation might become more widespre
287 P), while the opposite was observed for cold grasslands, where warming produced a net increase in who
288 ts, driven by the belowground compartment in grasslands, while forest responses to land management we
289 rall, our results suggest that this semiarid grassland will respond positively and linearly to predic
290 elayed precipitation peaks indicate semiarid grasslands will release less C through soil respiratory
291 the frequency of extreme dry years in mesic grasslands will therefore weaken predation pressure belo
294 e significantly different between arable and grassland, with higher biomass and lesser dominance by b
295 nges induced by the burial over 90 days in a grassland, woodland and two peatland sites, one damaged
296 xpansion is threatening the extent of alpine grasslands worldwide, and evaluating and predicting its