Fog in the California redwood forest: ecosystem inputs and use by plants.
about
The hydroclimatic and ecophysiological basis of cloud forest distributions under current and projected climatesEstimating the diets of animals using stable isotopes and a comprehensive Bayesian mixing modelEffects of timber harvest on river food webs: physical, chemical and biological responsesEpidermal Micromorphology and Mesophyll Structure of Populus euphratica Heteromorphic Leaves at Different Development Stages.Nonrainfall water origins and formation mechanisms.The role of dew in Negev Desert plants.Functional traits variation explains the distribution of Aextoxicon punctatum (Aextoxicaceae) in pronounced moisture gradients within fog-dependent forest fragments.Life in the clouds: are tropical montane cloud forests responding to changes in climate?Climatic context and ecological implications of summer fog decline in the coast redwood regionMillennium-scale crossdating and inter-annual climate sensitivities of standing California redwoods.Diverse functional responses to drought in a Mediterranean-type shrubland in South Africa.Maritime climate influence on chaparral composition and diversity in the coast range of central California.Mapping habitat suitability for at-risk plant species and its implications for restoration and reintroduction.Foliar uptake, carbon fluxes and water status are affected by the timing of daily fog in saplings from a threatened cloud forest.Stable isotopes in tree rings: towards a mechanistic understanding of isotope fractionation and mixing processes from the leaves to the wood.The contribution of occult precipitation to nutrient deposition on the west coast of South Africa.Trees harvesting the clouds: fog nets threatened by climate change.Coastal fog during summer drought improves the water status of sapling trees more than adult trees in a California pine forest.Xeromorphic traits help to maintain photosynthesis in the perhumid climate of a Taiwanese cloud forest.A glimpse at short-term controls of evapotranspiration along the southern slopes of Kilimanjaro.Not dead yet: the seasonal water relations of two perennial ferns during California's exceptional drought.Vegetation-zonation patterns across a temperate mountain cloud forest ecotone are not explained by variation in hydraulic functioning or water relations.Embolism spread in the primary xylem of Polystichum munitum: implications for water transport during seasonal drought.Cloud shading and fog drip influence the metabolism of a coastal pine ecosystem.Habitat moisture is an important driver of patterns of sap flow and water balance in tropical montane cloud forest epiphytes.The incidence and implications of clouds for cloud forest plant water relations.Foggy days and dry nights determine crown-level water balance in a seasonal tropical Montane cloud forest.Investigating the impacts of recycled water on long-lived conifers.Diverging drought-tolerance strategies explain tree species distribution along a fog-dependent moisture gradient in a temperate rain forest.Bulk C, H, O, and fatty acid C stable isotope analyses for purity assessment of vegetable oils from the southern and northern hemispheres.Water use sources of desert riparian Populus euphratica forests.Environmental filtering and land-use history drive patterns in biomass accumulation in a mediterranean-type landscape.Total and monomethyl mercury in terrestrial arthropods from the central California coast.Light use efficiency of California redwood forest understory plants along a moisture gradient.Influence of summer marine fog and low cloud stratus on water relations of evergreen woody shrubs (Arctostaphylos: Ericaceae) in the chaparral of central California.Ecosystem properties self-organize in response to a directional fog-vegetation interaction.Cloud immersion: an important water source for spruce and fir saplings in the southern Appalachian Mountains.The water relations and xylem attributes of albino redwood shoots (Sequioa sempervirens (D. Don.) Endl.).Foliar water uptake of Tamarix ramosissima from an atmosphere of high humidity.Pushing the limits to tree height: could foliar water storage compensate for hydraulic constraints inSequoia sempervirens?
P2860
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P2860
Fog in the California redwood forest: ecosystem inputs and use by plants.
description
1998 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
1998年の論文
@ja
1998年学术文章
@wuu
1998年学术文章
@zh-cn
1998年学术文章
@zh-hans
1998年学术文章
@zh-my
1998年学术文章
@zh-sg
1998年學術文章
@yue
1998年學術文章
@zh
1998年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Fog in the California redwood forest: ecosystem inputs and use by plants.
@en
Fog in the California redwood forest: ecosystem inputs and use by plants.
@nl
type
label
Fog in the California redwood forest: ecosystem inputs and use by plants.
@en
Fog in the California redwood forest: ecosystem inputs and use by plants.
@nl
prefLabel
Fog in the California redwood forest: ecosystem inputs and use by plants.
@en
Fog in the California redwood forest: ecosystem inputs and use by plants.
@nl
P356
P1433
P1476
Fog in the California redwood forest: ecosystem inputs and use by plants.
@en
P2093
T E Dawson
P2888
P304
P356
10.1007/S004420050683
P407
P577
1998-12-01T00:00:00Z