Negative relationships between species richness and elevation are common and attributed to changes in single environmental properties associated to elevation, such as temperature and habitat area. However, research has lacked taxonomic breadth and comprehensive elevation studies that consider multiple groups from different trophic levels are rare. We thus analysed 24 groups of plants, arthropods, and microorganisms grouped into six trophic guilds (predators, detritivores, herbivores, plants, bacteria and fungi) along a relatively short elevational gradient (~600 m) in a subtropical forest in south-east China. The total species richness of all organisms was not related to elevation, nor was the richness of plants, herbivores or microorganism...
Knowledge about how species richness varies along spatial and environmental gradients is important f...
Mountains are biodiversity hotspots and provide a wide range of ecosystem services. Yet, it remains...
1. Understanding coexistence in high biodiversity ecosystems requires knowledge of how rare and comm...
Negative relationships between species richness and elevation are common and attributed to changes i...
Negative relationships between species richness and elevation are common and attributed to changes i...
Mountain forests are at risk as the consequences of climate change will likely lead to altered tree ...
The elevational alpha biodiversity gradient in mountain regions is one of the well-known ecological ...
Gradients in elevation are increasingly used to investigate how species respond to changes in local ...
The increase of species richness with sampling area and the decrease with latitude and altitude are ...
Diversity-manipulation experiments suggest a positive effect of biodiversity on ecosystem properties...
Mountainous regions harbor high levels of biodiversity, while often experiencing substantial pressur...
It has been hypothesized that biotic interactions are stronger towards lower latitudes and elevation...
Aim: We tested the elevational herbivory defence hypothesis, which predicts that plants from low ele...
Abstract Species richness and abundance are the two most important diversity variables. Species abun...
Altitudinal patterns of species richness have become a focus of ecological research. Based on region...
Knowledge about how species richness varies along spatial and environmental gradients is important f...
Mountains are biodiversity hotspots and provide a wide range of ecosystem services. Yet, it remains...
1. Understanding coexistence in high biodiversity ecosystems requires knowledge of how rare and comm...
Negative relationships between species richness and elevation are common and attributed to changes i...
Negative relationships between species richness and elevation are common and attributed to changes i...
Mountain forests are at risk as the consequences of climate change will likely lead to altered tree ...
The elevational alpha biodiversity gradient in mountain regions is one of the well-known ecological ...
Gradients in elevation are increasingly used to investigate how species respond to changes in local ...
The increase of species richness with sampling area and the decrease with latitude and altitude are ...
Diversity-manipulation experiments suggest a positive effect of biodiversity on ecosystem properties...
Mountainous regions harbor high levels of biodiversity, while often experiencing substantial pressur...
It has been hypothesized that biotic interactions are stronger towards lower latitudes and elevation...
Aim: We tested the elevational herbivory defence hypothesis, which predicts that plants from low ele...
Abstract Species richness and abundance are the two most important diversity variables. Species abun...
Altitudinal patterns of species richness have become a focus of ecological research. Based on region...
Knowledge about how species richness varies along spatial and environmental gradients is important f...
Mountains are biodiversity hotspots and provide a wide range of ecosystem services. Yet, it remains...
1. Understanding coexistence in high biodiversity ecosystems requires knowledge of how rare and comm...