Aim: Tropical mountains around the world harbour an extraordinarily rich pool of plant species and are hotspots of biodiversity. Climatically, they can be zoned into montane climates at mid-altitudes and tropical alpine climates above the tree line. Around half of the tropical alpine species belong to plant lineages with a temperate ancestry, although these regions are often geographically distant. We test the hypothesis that these temperate lineages are pre-adapted to the tropical alpine climate. Location: New World, with a focus on tropical alpine Andes. Time period: Miocene to present. Major taxa studied: Flowering plants. Methods: We build multidimensional environmental models representing the full space of New World climates. We qu...
Relatively few species have been able to colonize extremely cold alpine environments. We investigate...
Relatively few species have been able to colonize extremely cold alpine environments. We investigate...
Relatively few species have been able to colonize extremely cold alpine environments. We investigate...
Aim: Tropical mountains around the world harbour an extraordinarily rich pool of plant species and a...
Aim: Tropical mountains around the world harbour an extraordinarily rich pool of plant species and a...
Relatively few species have been able to colonize extremely cold alpine environments. We investigate...
Background: Our aim is to understand the evolution of species-rich plant groups that shifted from tr...
Background: Our aim is to understand the evolution of species-rich plant groups that shifted from tr...
Background: Our aim is to understand the evolution of species-rich plant groups that shifted from tr...
Background: Our aim is to understand the evolution of species-rich plant groups that shifted from tr...
Background: Our aim is to understand the evolution of species-rich plant groups that shifted from tr...
Background: Our aim is to understand the evolution of species-rich plant groups that shifted from tr...
The tropical Andes of South America, the world's richest biodiversity hotspot, are home to many rapi...
Plant species tend to retain their ancestral ecology, responding to temporal, geographic and climati...
Relatively few species have been able to colonize extremely cold alpine environments. We investigate...
Relatively few species have been able to colonize extremely cold alpine environments. We investigate...
Relatively few species have been able to colonize extremely cold alpine environments. We investigate...
Relatively few species have been able to colonize extremely cold alpine environments. We investigate...
Aim: Tropical mountains around the world harbour an extraordinarily rich pool of plant species and a...
Aim: Tropical mountains around the world harbour an extraordinarily rich pool of plant species and a...
Relatively few species have been able to colonize extremely cold alpine environments. We investigate...
Background: Our aim is to understand the evolution of species-rich plant groups that shifted from tr...
Background: Our aim is to understand the evolution of species-rich plant groups that shifted from tr...
Background: Our aim is to understand the evolution of species-rich plant groups that shifted from tr...
Background: Our aim is to understand the evolution of species-rich plant groups that shifted from tr...
Background: Our aim is to understand the evolution of species-rich plant groups that shifted from tr...
Background: Our aim is to understand the evolution of species-rich plant groups that shifted from tr...
The tropical Andes of South America, the world's richest biodiversity hotspot, are home to many rapi...
Plant species tend to retain their ancestral ecology, responding to temporal, geographic and climati...
Relatively few species have been able to colonize extremely cold alpine environments. We investigate...
Relatively few species have been able to colonize extremely cold alpine environments. We investigate...
Relatively few species have been able to colonize extremely cold alpine environments. We investigate...
Relatively few species have been able to colonize extremely cold alpine environments. We investigate...