AIM: Current species distributions are shaped by present and past biotic and abiotic factors. Here, we assessed whether abiotic factors (habitat availability) in combination with past connectivity and a biotic factor (body mass) can explain the unique distribution pattern of Southeast Asian mammals, which are separated by the enigmatic biogeographic transition zone, the Isthmus of Kra (IoK), for which no strong geophysical barrier exists. LOCATION: Southeast Asia. TAXON: Mammals. METHODS: We projected habitat suitability for 125 mammal species using climate data for the present period and for two historic periods: mid‐Holocene (6 ka) and last glacial maximum (LGM 21 ka). Next, we employed a phylogenetic linear model to assess how present sp...
Tropical Rainforest Heritage sites of Sumatra are some of the most irreplaceable landscapes in the w...
AIM: In this article, we modelled the potential range shifts of tiger (Panthera tigris) populations ...
Aim:In this article, we modelled the potential range shifts of tiger (Panthera tigris) populations o...
Aim: Current species distributions are shaped by present and past biotic and abiotic factors. Here w...
We describe the distributions of mammal species between the Indochinese and Sundaic subregions and e...
Aim We tested the influence of Pleistocene climatic fluctuations and the potential effect of future ...
The Sunda region of Southeast Asia was transformed during Pleistocene glaciations when land bridges ...
It is suggested climate change contributes considerably to global biodiversity loss. Southeast Asia,...
Our study, involving species distribution modelling techniques, aimed at assessing the influence of ...
Summary. A rich mammalian fauna is found on islands that lie on the Sunda Shelf, a continental shelf...
A dissertation submitted in fulfillment of the requeriments for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy ...
International audienceThailand has long held a key position in South-East Asia because of its locati...
Aim: To reconstruct the palaeoenvironments of megafauna-bearing sites from Pleistocene Southeast Asi...
Tropical Rainforest Heritage sites of Sumatra are some of the most irreplaceable landscapes in the w...
AIM: In this article, we modelled the potential range shifts of tiger (Panthera tigris) populations ...
Aim:In this article, we modelled the potential range shifts of tiger (Panthera tigris) populations o...
Aim: Current species distributions are shaped by present and past biotic and abiotic factors. Here w...
We describe the distributions of mammal species between the Indochinese and Sundaic subregions and e...
Aim We tested the influence of Pleistocene climatic fluctuations and the potential effect of future ...
The Sunda region of Southeast Asia was transformed during Pleistocene glaciations when land bridges ...
It is suggested climate change contributes considerably to global biodiversity loss. Southeast Asia,...
Our study, involving species distribution modelling techniques, aimed at assessing the influence of ...
Summary. A rich mammalian fauna is found on islands that lie on the Sunda Shelf, a continental shelf...
A dissertation submitted in fulfillment of the requeriments for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy ...
International audienceThailand has long held a key position in South-East Asia because of its locati...
Aim: To reconstruct the palaeoenvironments of megafauna-bearing sites from Pleistocene Southeast Asi...
Tropical Rainforest Heritage sites of Sumatra are some of the most irreplaceable landscapes in the w...
AIM: In this article, we modelled the potential range shifts of tiger (Panthera tigris) populations ...
Aim:In this article, we modelled the potential range shifts of tiger (Panthera tigris) populations o...