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1 em due to deforestation only of parts of the rainforest.
2 non-ENSO year 2000 in a Costa Rican tropical rainforest.
3 heir unique lifestyle in the Central African rainforest.
4 in the photochemistry active over the Amazon rainforest.
5 ree Pacific coast to the VBRV-endemic Amazon rainforest.
6 triggers tree death from drought in tropical rainforest.
7 ion experiment (TFE) in an eastern Amazonian rainforest.
8 it-scarce periods in a West African tropical rainforest.
9 ation ranging from wooded savannahs to humid rainforest.
10 CO2), with highest levels in rivers draining rainforest.
11 tions located west-to-east of the equatorial rainforest.
12 using a vertical gradient within a tropical rainforest.
13 anging from cool Andean highland to Amazonia rainforest.
14 he earliest megafossil record of Neotropical rainforest.
15 -scale "dieback" or degradation of Amazonian rainforest.
16 lar family composition to extant Neotropical rainforest.
17 nitrogen and volatile organic compounds than rainforest.
18 large tracts of commercially logged tropical rainforest.
19 an area and 2 rural villages in the tropical rainforest.
20 hern Rocky Mountain (NRM) forest and coastal rainforest.
21 history of pathogen-driven selection in the rainforest.
22 bles, on ecosystem dynamics in a subtropical rainforest.
23 reme heat and drought over most of Amazonian rainforests.
24 n shape community dynamics in highly diverse rainforests.
25 se are limiting factors in coastal temperate rainforests.
26 is roughly equivalent to that of terrestrial rainforests.
27 ese ecological processes operate in tropical rainforests.
28 ersity over 8-16 years in eight successional rainforests.
29 r of avian speciation in lowland Neotropical rainforests.
30 al ecosystem processes dominated by tropical rainforests.
31 ose clades that succeeded radiating into the rainforests.
32 in few animal-pollinated plants in tropical rainforests.
33 N in stream waters of temperate and tropical rainforests.
34 od shortages in their native Southeast Asian rainforests.
35 pproximately 25% in a majority of the Amazon rainforests.
36 corridor between the Amazonian and Atlantic rainforests.
37 s similar to the litter of extant equatorial rainforests.
38 communities of Southeast Asian lower-montane rainforests.
39 t role in the redistribution of nutrients in rainforests.
40 matic events pose severe hazards to tropical rainforests.
43 sampled 222 ant species in lowland, tropical rainforest across four vertical strata: subterranean, gr
44 of large geometric earthworks beneath intact rainforest across southern Amazonia challenges its statu
45 seen in a set of well characterized Hawaiian rainforests, across which we have measured the 15N/14N o
48 arts of the boreal forest belt, the tropical rainforest, alpine regions worldwide, steppe and prairie
50 centrations do not differ significantly over rainforest and adjacent oil palm plantation landscapes.
51 berg rock outcrops in the Brazilian Atlantic rainforest and are thus long-term fragmented by nature.
52 ge vulnerable ecosystems, such as the Amazon rainforest and Caribbean coral reefs, may take only a fe
53 versity for an extensive region of a Bornean rainforest and challenge these data with models incorpor
55 rns, which occupies the junction between the rainforest and dry forest and currently is known only fr
56 thora communities in the North French Guiana rainforest and investigated how they are structured by h
59 equent and that biome shifts to the Savanna, Rainforest and Temperate Biomes are infrequent and close
60 af-litter ant species in unlogged and logged rainforest and tested four predictions: (i) there is a n
61 e the nonlinear couplings between the Amazon rainforest and the atmospheric moisture transport from t
62 ve compass information for navigation in the rainforest and, additionally, provide cues for visual di
63 bp induced a disequilibrium between montane rainforests and climate that drove a loss of resilience
64 te the theory: bird conservation in tropical rainforests and coastal defence provided by mangrove for
65 inside indigenous territories in the Amazon rainforest, and could provide an important positive exte
67 s collected over three decades, we show that rainforest anthrax is a persistent and widespread cause
70 94 out of every 100 individual arthropods in rainforests are ants, and they constitute up to 15% of a
71 future climate and fire conditions: tropical rainforests are especially vulnerable, whereas seasonal
73 topographic positions suggests that tropical rainforests are more sensitive to moisture deficits than
80 ammalian diversity distributions, one in the rainforest areas (Deep Rainforest Diversity, DRD) contai
81 damped driven pendulum, a model of Amazonian rainforest as a known climate tipping element and the Da
83 vey of 49 ecosystems from tundra to tropical rainforest, average worker mass and worker number were u
84 rom three distinct environments: (a) primary rainforest, (b) subtropical woodland, and (c) fifth-gene
85 olution experiment conducted in the tropical rainforest, bats visited computer-automated flowers with
86 irst moved southward, through the equatorial rainforest, before spreading toward eastern and southern
87 s have been logged, with dramatic impacts on rainforest biodiversity that may disrupt key ecosystem p
88 at outbreaks located along the limits of the rainforest biome were significantly associated with fore
92 esponds strongly to conversion of the Amazon rainforest, but in a manner different from plants and an
95 were slowed, delaying the occupation of the rainforest by on average 300 y, compared with similar mi
96 extraordinary abundance of ants in tropical rainforest canopies has led to speculation that numerous
97 rophic 50-foot free-fall from the top of the rainforest canopy to the forest floor at her remote fiel
101 h an impact extending over 1,000 km from the rainforest city of Manaus (population 2.1 million).
105 investigations into the impacts of purported rainforest collapse on palaeotropical vertebrate diversi
108 ries under terra firme (upland interfluvial) rainforest, directly challenging the "pristine" status o
109 clude that the wet periods probably affected rainforest distribution, as plant fossils show that fore
110 rsity occurred at the same time as a loss of rainforest diversity and cannot be explained by ecologic
112 ributions, one in the rainforest areas (Deep Rainforest Diversity, DRD) containing taxa of lower hunt
114 e related to differential losses of tropical rainforests during the Cenozoic, but not to the cumulati
116 lar, the hypothesized replacement of ancient rainforest-dwelling extinct lineages by antecedents of x
117 This work demonstrates that while temperate rainforest dynamics occur at fine spatial scales (<1000
119 The impacts of this climate extreme on the rainforest ecosystems remain to be documented and are li
120 of these epiphytes--a neglected component in rainforest ecosystems--can more than double our estimate
124 ted so far-and show that a temperate lowland rainforest environment existed at a palaeolatitude of ab
127 biomass of invertebrates living in a common rainforest epiphyte, describe a striking relationship be
128 tribution traits of 18 New Zealand temperate rainforest evergreens; we then used a 3-D digitiser and
131 over the late Quaternary period by modeling rainforest expansion and contraction in 21 biogeographic
132 r settlement despite the climatically driven rainforest expansion that began approximately 2,000 y ag
133 de strong evidence that the same Neotropical rainforest families have characterized the biome since t
134 r is a Sumatran Pleistocene cave with a rich rainforest fauna associated with fossil human teeth.
135 f ants to the removal of food resources from rainforest floors and thus nutrient redistribution.
137 t all tropical fruits are equally desired by rainforest foragers and some fruit trees get depleted mo
138 vironmental data have hinted at pre-Holocene rainforest foraging, earlier human reliance on rainfores
141 cross an urbanization gradient in the Amazon rainforest, from a remote Peruvian Amerindian village to
142 sumptions by relating field abundance of the rainforest fruit fly Drosophila birchii to ecological ch
144 The thermal environments of this Panama rainforest generate a range of CTmax subsuming 74% of th
147 , followed emerging savannah corridors, with rainforest habitats repeatedly imposing temporal barrier
149 e 2 species coexist are areas where pristine rainforest has been degraded, results also suggest that
152 illus cereus biovar anthracis, in a tropical rainforest have severe consequences for local wildlife c
155 rved common ancestry between central African rainforest HGs and southern African San, the latter of w
156 th the exception of the EHG, central African rainforest HGs, and San, other HG groups in Africa appea
158 In contrast, the San and Central African rainforest hunter-gatherer (CRHG), Hadza hunter-gatherer
159 ted with the pygmy phenotype in the Batwa, a rainforest hunter-gatherer population from Uganda (east
160 to bacterial and viral stimuli between Batwa rainforest hunter-gatherers and Bakiga agriculturalists
161 he first socio-economic interactions between rainforest hunter-gatherers and farmers introduced by th
162 wly generated exomes, from 14 populations of rainforest hunter-gatherers and farmers, together with 4
165 e confers a selective advantage for tropical rainforest hunter-gatherers but raising questions about
166 hen we expanded our analysis to include Baka rainforest hunter-gatherers from Cameroon and Gabon (wes
169 has had an impact on the genetic history of rainforest hunter-gatherers-historically referred to as
173 lia; AmazonFACE in a highly diverse, primary rainforest in Brazil; BIFoR-FACE in a 150-yr-old deciduo
174 In this study, selectively logged tropical rainforest in Indonesian Borneo is shown to contain high
176 of ecological data from a protected primary rainforest in Malaysia to illutrate how subsidies from n
178 nce of Athrotaxis spp. and Nothofagus gunnii rainforest in Tasmania (hereon "montane rainforest") as
183 the forests of the North American temperate rainforests in Alaska, which store >2.8 Pg C in biomass
184 n delta(13)C(diet) values from closed-canopy rainforests in Amazonia (-27.4 per mille) and equatorial
187 nning experimental drought study in tropical rainforest (in the Brazilian Amazon), we test whether ca
188 ire frequencies, converting several tropical rainforests into derived savannas, a phenomenon known as
192 how that the vegetation canopy of the Amazon rainforest is highly sensitive to changes in precipitati
196 The presence of a high-diversity tropical rainforest is unexpected, because other Paleocene floras
199 large majority of plant species diversity in rainforests is recent, suggesting (episodic) species tur
200 t of carbon that is being absorbed by mature rainforests is similar to or greater than that being rel
201 Old-growth forest conservation in tropical rainforests is therefore a highly-recommended solution f
202 Here, we show that some insects, such as rainforest katydids, possess equivalent biophysical mech
203 -year field study of Propithecus edwardsi, a rainforest lemur from Madagascar with a maximum lifespan
204 ithecus diadema, n = 3), endangered Malagasy rainforest lemurs, and we report extremely efficient rec
206 vorous insects in this Paleocene Neotropical rainforest may reflect an early stage in the diversifica
207 e inter-annual variability and that tropical rainforests may become less relevant drivers in the futu
211 regions of Africa that are not dominated by rainforest nor desert, the map shows a scatter of areas
212 , to our knowledge, the earliest evidence of rainforest occupation by AMH, and underscores the import
213 28 woody species of Magnoliids in a tropical rainforest of Madagascar and reported, for the first tim
216 tion zone between the Saharan desert and the rainforests of Central Africa and the Guinean Coast, exp
217 throughout secondary succession in tropical rainforests of north-east Costa Rica, and that attempts
220 Homo sapiens' relationship with the tropical rainforests of South Asia is therefore long-standing, a
221 andscapes currently occupied by the seasonal rainforests of southern Amazonia may therefore not have
225 lution of the biomass dynamics of the Amazon rainforest over three decades using a distributed networ
228 perience periodic O(2) limitation-a tropical rainforest Oxisol and a temperate cropland Mollisol-with
236 g 17 consecutive years of data from tropical rainforest plots in Costa Rica that range from 10 y sinc
240 When populations did move from savannah into rainforest, rates of migration were slowed, delaying the
245 ining climate change feedbacks from tropical rainforests requires an understanding of how carbon gain
246 ing the ecological integrity of Kalimantan's rainforests requires immediate transnational management.
247 heights of 0, 5, 10, and 15 m in trees in a rainforest reserve bordering Manaus, Brazil, to characte
249 show that human foragers relied primarily on rainforest resources from at least ~20,000 years ago, wi
252 ng sustainability, the other in the northern rainforest-savanna mosaic, with species of greater hunti
255 na, a tree from the South American temperate rainforest shows strong heteroblasty affecting leaf shap
259 an syntypes of U. kikkawai show that it is a rainforest species occurring from Costa Rica to Brazil.
262 es, shrubs and lianas distributed across the Rainforest, Succulent, Temperate and Savanna Biomes.
263 we suggest that the overall carbon budget of rainforests, summed across terrestrial and aquatic envir
265 thin ecosystems: across 31 trees in a Panama rainforest, surfaces exposed to sun were 8 degrees C war
267 ' are large stands of trees in the Amazonian rainforest that consist almost entirely of a single spec
268 appear to have filled a niche in Australia's rainforests that has not been occupied by any other mamm
272 a long-term drought experiment in the Amazon rainforest to evaluate the role of leaf-level water rela
273 sites within a vast area of intact Amazonian rainforest to reveal reduced abundance of terrestrial an
274 utrient sources in a mixed-species temperate rainforest to show that N-fixing trees access more rock-
275 ze the response of an old-growth Neotropical rainforest to the severe heat and drought associated wit
276 , pH, conductivity, and total alkalinity) in rainforests to those more typical for savannah systems.
277 nd leaf turgor loss point among 55 temperate rainforest tree species in New Zealand and tested which
278 limits of D(V) typical of modern megathermal rainforest trees first appear during a second wave of in
279 lain species climatic limits among temperate rainforest trees in a region where chronic water limitat
281 ryptic predator from the soils of the Amazon rainforest was inferred from several nuclear genes, sequ
282 a community composition of the French Guiana rainforest was significantly impacted by the host plant
283 ing a fertilization experiment in a tropical rainforest, we evaluated how variable substrate stoichio
284 U has not been reported for lowland tropical rainforests; we test whether FU occurs in six common Ama
285 d Bantus, living in the southern Cameroonian rainforest, were matched for sex, age, and ethnicity wit
286 to occur mainly in the mountainous limestone rainforests where F. elastica may be native or tradition
287 behavior related to perch selection, even in rainforests where much of the solar radiation is shielde
289 d ant-seed mutualism occurs in the Amazonian rainforest, where arboreal ants collect seeds of several
290 tes are dominant species in primary tropical rainforests, where their abundance and diversity contrib
291 changes in the net carbon flux of a tropical rainforest which experiences a pronounced dry season.
292 ed to condensational latent heating over the rainforest, which strongly enhances atmospheric moisture
293 e that urban markets can defaunate deep into rainforest wilderness has implications for other urbaniz
294 equency and severity of droughts in tropical rainforests will alter termite communities and the maint
295 l BNF within the historical area of tropical rainforest with current anthropogenic N inputs indicates
297 ear to have allowed for the establishment of rainforests within 1.4 million years of the K-T boundary
298 a prominent plant group in lowland tropical rainforests world-wide but also occur in all other tropi