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 al regions) and precipitation (e.g. tropical savannas).
2 ed set of LMH exclosures in semi-arid Kenyan savanna.
3 ss an aridity gradient in a semiarid African savanna.
4 d at the landscape scale, as forest replaces savanna.
5 the West African forest and the West African savanna.
6 er than in other neotropical biomes, such as savanna.
7 alian herbivores in a semi-arid East African savanna.
8 a ants) animal species in a semi-arid Kenyan savanna.
9 (six wild, one domestic) in semiarid African savanna.
10 l dung balls along straight paths across the savanna.
11 o determine tree distributions in an African savanna.
12 and woody thickening in a warm-temperate oak savanna.
13 e rates of tree growth and canopy closure in savanna.
14 fire-free intervals, which are rare in mesic savanna.
15 more appropriate to seasonal forest than to savanna.
16 als on an ant-Acacia mutualism in an African savanna.
17 pe-scale productivity gradient in an African savanna.
18 r determining the distribution of forest and savanna.
19 precipitation variability and was largest in savannas.
20 ease two and a half times that of Australian savannas.
21 ense precipitation change, especially within savannas.
22 ill accelerate the expansion of forests into savannas.
23 n the stability of tree-grass coexistence in savannas.
24 e coexistence of woody plants and grasses in savannas.
25 erwise displacing grasses, at least in mesic savannas.
26 critical transitions between grasslands and savannas.
27 anna environments, as well as in present-day savannas.
28 tion of burned areas, in particular in xeric savannas.
29 re-adapted and sensitive fungal taxa in pine savannas.
30 ance trends over time in rural West Africa's savannas.
32 ng several tropical rainforests into derived savannas, a phenomenon known as "savannization." Yet, we
34 present knowledge of diversity across other savanna-adapted species, as well as with palaeoclimate a
36 al resolution of 56 cm throughout 1640 ha of savanna after 6-, 22-, 35-, and 41-year exclusions of he
37 dynamics in frequently burned longleaf pine savannas along a gradient of soil moisture availability
38 ons, generally decreased, both in forest and savanna, although the directionality of changes varied l
39 can be used to differentiate between forest, savanna and admixed isolates, which has not previously b
40 l variations in evaporative water use by the savanna and annual grassland were relatively decoupled f
43 t with fire to determine the distribution of savanna and forest by influencing the time needed to rea
44 und traits resulted in clusters representing savanna and forest species, with low and high shoot inve
48 ssy ecosystem structure worldwide, such that savanna and grassland states determined by fire or grazi
50 arbon dioxide exchange over and under an oak savanna and over an annual grassland in the Mediterranea
51 k (NLCB 334 Mg C km(-2) year(-1) ), and that savanna and wetland areas contributed 84% and 16% to thi
52 d pattern of woody vegetation expansion into savannas and densification within forests and savannas f
53 s, sedges, and succulents common in tropical savannas and deserts) likely represents a significant ec
55 adaptation in frequently burned areas across savannas and forests in both temperate and tropical regi
56 vity of ecosystem carbon across 180 plots in savannas and forests throughout the 2.2-million km(2) Ce
58 en up by the mid-continent aridification and savannas and grasslands expanded into the interior of th
59 encroachment in both Australian and African savannas and grasslands may present similar threats to b
60 ct the spread of woody vegetation in African savannas and grasslands under future climate scenarios,
64 several million years before fire-maintained savannas and probably, in different environmental condit
65 provide insights into the nature of African savannas and suggest that future changes in precipitatio
66 abundance to climate variations in tropical savannas and suggest that projected increases in rainfal
68 predict will be frequent in rain forest and savanna, and which represent excellent case studies of i
69 nate tropical and subtropical grasslands and savannas, and C(3) grasses dominate the world's cooler t
70 . used spatial data to show that grasslands, savannas, and forests represent opposing stable states.
72 tning strikes were more frequent in forests, savannas, and urban areas than in grasslands, shrublands
73 al model with two components: (1) forest and savanna are alternative stable states, maintained by tre
77 hment over the next century and that African savannas are at high risk of widespread vegetation chang
80 lusions 55 Acknowledgements 55 References 56 Savannas are highly variable systems, and predicting var
85 A large fraction of the world grasslands and savannas are undergoing a rapid shift from herbaceous to
87 s biodiversity hotspot shows that forest and savanna area both declined, by 74% (2.8 million ha) and
88 carbon-diversity trade-offs on the amount of savanna area remaining requires land managers to careful
89 es in seasonal floodplains in Bolivia's Beni savannas as vestiges of pre-European earthen fish weirs,
90 eastern African australopith diet to include savanna-based foods represents a shift to use of plant f
91 ist and that by about 1.8 million years ago, savanna-based foods such as grasses or sedges or animals
92 initial tropical or subtropical expansion of savanna between 10 and 15 Ma, which then extended to hig
93 rica and between the West African forest and savanna bioclimes, with evidence of unidirectional gene
94 use in the context of climate-driven forest-savanna biome shifts through the mid-to-late Holocene.
97 ates of the origin and latitudinal spread of savannas broadly correspond with isotopic age estimates
99 se results show that climatic impacts on dry-savanna burning are heterogeneous through time, with imp
100 middle Holocene, the relative importance of savanna burning in the region varied primarily in respon
102 ial native vegetation (forest, grassland, or savanna) but strongly dependent on the characteristics o
103 the distributions of tropical woodlands and savannas, but our understanding of these processes is li
109 mary agent of treefall across widely varying savanna conditions, and a large-scale 'elephant trap' pr
110 ive data of tree distributions in an African savanna, derived from airborne Light Detection and Rangi
111 riving forest expansion and densification of savannas directly (i.e., increasing precipitation) and i
113 developed a long-term analysis of forest and savanna distribution across the Amazon-Cerrado transitio
115 herbarium records, we mapped the forest and savanna distributions across Africa and quantified their
116 arpest trade-offs between carbon storage and savanna diversity occurred at the early stages of carbon
118 expanse of presumed anthropogenic grassland savanna, dominated by the Family Poaceae, that blankets
119 our clusters representing dry savanna, humid savanna, dry forest and moist forest, characterized by a
120 structure of AMF communities in grasslands, savannas, dry forests and miombo in a protected area und
121 erestimate the bistability of grasslands and savannas due to limitations of substituting space for ti
122 biome distributions, whether at the cost of savanna (due to fragmentation) or forest (due to climate
124 e distribution of 349 species of forest- and savanna-dwelling mammal species across South America.
126 ntral Asia (16%) and decline in many African savannas (e.g., -18% in sub-Saharan western Africa).
127 transect largely contained within the Sudan-Savanna ecoclimatic zone, we analyzed chromosomal invers
129 perimentally excluding large wildlife from a savanna ecosystem in East Africa, and examining changes
130 iving in a temporally and spatially variable savanna ecosystem, I found that variance in reproductive
131 beest, zebra and buffalo-dominant species in savanna ecosystems - to be replaced by smaller, less wat
133 suggest that although woody encroachment in savanna ecosystems may provide substantial carbon benefi
134 Fire regulates the structure and function of savanna ecosystems, yet we lack understanding of how cyc
135 play in driving tree growth and survival in savannas, ecosystems of global economic and ecological i
138 was not consequent to regional decimation of savanna elephants for their ivory in the 19(th) and 20(t
140 er, we show that the ivory was entirely from savanna elephants, most probably originating from a narr
143 y encroachment may reduce plant diversity of savanna endemics, even as the diversity of encroaching f
144 n expansion and fragmentation in the African savanna environment, similar to the processes that acted
146 lumbian tropical forest and Central American savanna environments, as well as in present-day savannas
149 Our findings suggest that herbivore-adapted savannas evolved several million years before fire-maint
151 ether mammals could also have contributed to savanna expansion by using spinescence as a marker of ma
154 principal sources of disturbance in African savannas, fire and elephants, and measured their indepen
159 e wet-dry transition season and northward to savanna-forest transition and tropical seasonal forest r
160 s structure alone cannot separate out wetter savannas from drier forests for example, and there are a
162 netic and functional--in C4-dominanted mesic savanna grassland sites with similar structure and physi
163 es of up to ca. 20-30% were simulated within savanna, grassland, and shrubland vegetation types.
164 ion density in places previously occupied by savanna-grassland mosaics) favouring some species at the
165 rbon and nitrogen losses were substantial in savanna grasslands and broadleaf forests, but not in tem
171 elevations, and considered afforestation of savannas, grasslands, and shrublands to be restoration.
173 ositively associated with living in semiarid savanna habitats and with temporal variability in rainfa
175 the management of biodiversity and carbon in savanna habitats, but has rarely been evaluated empirica
176 roles in the initial hominin colonization of savanna habitats, the development of the distinctive sku
177 frican forest elephants currently range into savanna habitats;(11-13) our findings suggest that this
179 articularly in the vast deserts and tropical savannas) has been in areas that are remote from human p
183 s resulted in four clusters representing dry savanna, humid savanna, dry forest and moist forest, cha
186 Climate is clearly important, but extensive savannas in some high rainfall areas suggest a decouplin
187 ion by the ants stabilizes tree cover across savannas in what is otherwise a highly dynamic biome.
189 condary contact with its close relative--the savanna-inhabiting Silver-backed Butcherbird--whose cont
190 of elephants, tree encroachment may convert savannas into closed-canopy woodlands; when elephants in
192 e coexistence of woody plants and grasses in savannas is determined by a complex set of interacting f
193 haping ecosystems, especially grasslands and savannas, it is important to understand its broader impa
194 tives on an emerging alternative approach to savanna land use and conservation that can help reduce c
195 t the inhabitants exploited a naturally open savanna landscape that they maintained around their sett
197 ons of cooperatively breeding vertebrates in savanna-like habitats and other temporally variable envi
198 al habitat, clustered open and closed areas (savanna-like), where the advantage of planning peaks.
200 of hybridization between forest females and savanna males, which are larger and reproductively domin
201 at pre-Columbian farmers practiced fire-free savanna management calls into question the widely held a
205 rest extensions into the Arctic and semiarid savannas; more frequent wildfire in Amazonia, the far no
206 bility, the other in the northern rainforest-savanna mosaic, with species of greater hunting potentia
210 nutrient-rich soils, whereas fire-maintained savannas occur in wetter climates on nutrient-poor soils
211 l data indicate that fire in the dry lowland savanna of southeastern Kenya was not fuel-limited durin
212 ss (Schizachyrium scoparium) in southern oak savanna of the United States were evaluated under four c
216 at extensive fires in the seasonally flooded savannas of French Guiana are a post-Columbian phenomeno
217 sing most rapidly in the remaining uncleared savannas of South America, most likely due to fire suppr
219 Forest Code governs the fate of forests and savannas on Brazil's 394 Mha of privately owned lands.
221 r the range of rainfall observed in semiarid savannas; patterns of soil moisture display islands whos
222 forces reconsideration of how pre-Columbian savanna peoples practiced raised-field agriculture and h
225 me are frequent and that biome shifts to the Savanna, Rainforest and Temperate Biomes are infrequent
226 iomass burning associated with pre-A.D. 1492 savanna raised-field agriculture and a sharp increase in
228 s across Africa, that maximum woody cover in savannas receiving a mean annual precipitation (MAP) of
236 raits should be a priority for understanding savanna responses to changing climate and disturbances.
237 stand how vegetation structure in an African savanna shaped the perceived predation risk of small mam
238 - and branch-level data harvested from three savanna sites across a rainfall gradient in Mali, West A
242 ed us to classify tree species as forest vs. savanna specialists, with some generalist species that s
244 of forest encroachment, and beyond a point, savanna species losses outpace forest species gains with
246 merica will be increasingly replaced by open savanna species, a phenomenon we name "faunal savannizat
251 milarly high lightning frequency in tropical savannas suggests that lightning also influences savanna
252 irm extensive climatic overlap of forest and savanna, supporting the alternative stable states hypoth
253 hed quickly, increasing the probability that savanna switches to forest, whereas low-resource sites a
257 logical record from a French Guianan coastal savanna that forces reconsideration of how pre-Columbian
258 een mosaic, consisting of a matrix of wooded savanna that formed a transitional zone between the extr
259 tent with scenarios of hominin adaptation to savannas, these data come from Ugalla (Tanzania), one of
260 e will differentially alter the structure of savannas through hydrological changes to the seasonally
263 e African vegetation types, varying from dry savanna to moist forest, in a glasshouse for 6 months, a
264 ed tree rooting patterns in Southern African savannas to ask: how tree rooting strategies affected sp
265 gh the process of hydraulic lift could allow savannas to persist stably in mesic regions that would o
267 ate assemblages in ecotone regions of forest-savanna transitions from South America will be increasin
268 nnas suggests that lightning also influences savanna tree mortality rates and ecosystem processes.
270 nal Park, South Africa, to assess sources of savanna treefall across nested gradients of climate, top
271 raits influence both thresholds; saplings of savanna trees accumulate bark thickness more quickly tha
274 trees accumulate leaf area more rapidly than savanna trees, thereby accelerating the transition to fo
275 Here, using the evolutionary ages of African savanna trees, we suggest an initial tropical or subtrop
278 the trajectory of juniper encroachment into savannas, under these anticipated climatic conditions.
284 ess for impala escaping from cheetah in open savanna versus acacia thicket habitat, though escape suc
286 mine climate-vegetation-fire linkages in dry savanna, we conducted macroscopic and microscopic charco
288 ed in 83 different locations for forests and savannas, we developed interpolation maps to assess the
289 the human footprint, and proximity to woody savanna were each strongly associated with HeV spillover
290 , 6 domesticated) in a semiarid East African savanna, which enabled high-resolution assessment of sea
295 ved in a river-margin forest in an otherwise savanna (wooded grassland) landscape at Aramis, Ethiopia
298 s expected, but that the richness of endemic savanna woody plant species declines with carbon storage
300 -deciduous (SDF), dry forests (DF) and woody savanna (WS), we find that (i) climate is more closely r