The richness of plant species in Swiss alpine-nival summits increased during the climate warming of the 20th century. Thirty-seven summits (2797-3418 m a.s.l.) with both old (~1900-1920) and recent (~2000) plant inventories were used to test whether biological species traits can explain the observed rates of summit colonisation. Species were classified into two groups: good colonisers (colonising five or more summits) and weak colonisers (fewer than five new summits). We compared species traits related to growth, reproduction and dispersal between these two groups and between the good colonisers and a group of high alpine grassland species. The observed colonisation pattern was subsequently compared to a simulated random colonisation patter...
The paper provides the first estimate of the role of abiotic and anthropogenic variables driving bot...
Mountain plant species with wide elevational ranges are expected to be exposed to different selectio...
Divergent selection pressures imposed by contrasting environmental conditions at opposite ends of en...
Upward migration of plant species due to climate change has become evident in several European mount...
International audienceClimate warming is shifting the distributions of mountain plant species to hig...
International audienceOver the last 20 years, several studies comparing recent survey data with hist...
Ecological filtering, imposed by climatic constraints or competitive interactions, might shape distr...
International audienceTo test the influence of various species traits, elevation and phylogeographic...
Aim: Geographic distribution limits of organisms are often affected by climate, but little is known ...
Endemic species are not uniformly distributed across the world but some areas are richer than others...
High-mountain ecosystems are spots of plant diversity in which species composition and traits depict...
Biological traits that are advantageous under specific ecological conditions should be present in a ...
Climate change is expected to trigger an upward expansion of plants in mountain regions and, althoug...
Plant survival in alpine landscapes is constantly challenged by the harsh and often unpredictable en...
Many studies report that mountain plant species are shifting upward in elevation. However, the major...
The paper provides the first estimate of the role of abiotic and anthropogenic variables driving bot...
Mountain plant species with wide elevational ranges are expected to be exposed to different selectio...
Divergent selection pressures imposed by contrasting environmental conditions at opposite ends of en...
Upward migration of plant species due to climate change has become evident in several European mount...
International audienceClimate warming is shifting the distributions of mountain plant species to hig...
International audienceOver the last 20 years, several studies comparing recent survey data with hist...
Ecological filtering, imposed by climatic constraints or competitive interactions, might shape distr...
International audienceTo test the influence of various species traits, elevation and phylogeographic...
Aim: Geographic distribution limits of organisms are often affected by climate, but little is known ...
Endemic species are not uniformly distributed across the world but some areas are richer than others...
High-mountain ecosystems are spots of plant diversity in which species composition and traits depict...
Biological traits that are advantageous under specific ecological conditions should be present in a ...
Climate change is expected to trigger an upward expansion of plants in mountain regions and, althoug...
Plant survival in alpine landscapes is constantly challenged by the harsh and often unpredictable en...
Many studies report that mountain plant species are shifting upward in elevation. However, the major...
The paper provides the first estimate of the role of abiotic and anthropogenic variables driving bot...
Mountain plant species with wide elevational ranges are expected to be exposed to different selectio...
Divergent selection pressures imposed by contrasting environmental conditions at opposite ends of en...