Closer collaboration among ecologists, systematists, and evolutionary biologists working in tropical forests, centred on studies within long-term permanent plots, would be highly beneficial for their respective fields. With a key unifying theme of the importance of vouchered collection and precise identification of species, especially rare ones, we identify four priority areas where improving links between these communities could achieve significant progress in biodiversity and conservation science: (i) increasing the pace of species discovery; (ii) documenting species turnover across space and time; (iii) improving models of ecosystem change; and (iv) understanding the evolutionary assembly of communities and biomes
This is my talk given at the 2018 Ecological Society of America meeting in New Orleans, USA. This t...
© 2020 Missouri Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. The Neotropics are the most species-rich area...
Understanding the processes that have generated the latitudinal biodiversity gradient and the contin...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Elsevier (Cell Press) via the DOI in this r...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Springer Verlag via the DOI in this recordG...
1. The demise of tropical rainforests will lead to a large-scale extinction of genetic diversity, pa...
pre-printBiologists have long been intrigued by the diversity of tropical forests, where 1 hectare m...
This is the author accepted manuscript. the final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Tropical America (the Neotropics) and tropical Africa have comparable climate and share a geological...
The challenges associated with sampling rare species or populations can limit our ability to make ac...
The future of tropical forest biodiversity depends more than ever on the effective management of hum...
Tropical rainforests are the most biologically diverse of terrestrial biomes. Despite the ecological...
An ecological community\u27s species diversity tends to erode through time as a result of stochastic...
The fate of much of the world's terrestrial biodiversity is linked to the management of human-modifi...
Forests are the most diverse and productive terrestrial ecosystems on Earth, so sustainably managing...
This is my talk given at the 2018 Ecological Society of America meeting in New Orleans, USA. This t...
© 2020 Missouri Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. The Neotropics are the most species-rich area...
Understanding the processes that have generated the latitudinal biodiversity gradient and the contin...
This is the final version of the article. Available from Elsevier (Cell Press) via the DOI in this r...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Springer Verlag via the DOI in this recordG...
1. The demise of tropical rainforests will lead to a large-scale extinction of genetic diversity, pa...
pre-printBiologists have long been intrigued by the diversity of tropical forests, where 1 hectare m...
This is the author accepted manuscript. the final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in ...
Tropical America (the Neotropics) and tropical Africa have comparable climate and share a geological...
The challenges associated with sampling rare species or populations can limit our ability to make ac...
The future of tropical forest biodiversity depends more than ever on the effective management of hum...
Tropical rainforests are the most biologically diverse of terrestrial biomes. Despite the ecological...
An ecological community\u27s species diversity tends to erode through time as a result of stochastic...
The fate of much of the world's terrestrial biodiversity is linked to the management of human-modifi...
Forests are the most diverse and productive terrestrial ecosystems on Earth, so sustainably managing...
This is my talk given at the 2018 Ecological Society of America meeting in New Orleans, USA. This t...
© 2020 Missouri Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. The Neotropics are the most species-rich area...
Understanding the processes that have generated the latitudinal biodiversity gradient and the contin...