MODERN ANALOGS IN QUATERNARY PALEOECOLOGY: Here Today, Gone Yesterday, Gone Tomorrow?
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Capturing the surface texture and shape of pollen: a comparison of microscopy techniquesEvaluating the significance of paleophylogeographic species distribution models in reconstructing quaternary range-shifts of nearctic cheloniansComparative phylogeography of a coevolved community: concerted population expansions in Joshua trees and four yucca mothsGlobal change and terrestrial plant community dynamicsTemperature Range Shifts for Three European Tree Species over the Last 10,000 YearsCommunity ecology in a changing environment: Perspectives from the Quaternary180,000 years of climate change in Europe: avifaunal responses and vegetation implicationsPlant diversity changes during the postglacial in East Asia: insights from Forest Refugia on Halla Volcano, Jeju IslandEcological correlates of range shifts of Late Pleistocene mammalsCenozoic continental climatic evolution of Central EuropeEvolution and the latitudinal diversity gradient: speciation, extinction and biogeographyModel systems for a no-analog future: species associations and climates during the last deglaciation.Predicting the likely response of data-poor ecosystems to climate change using space-for-time substitution across domains.A 2.5-million-year perspective on coarse-filter strategies for conserving nature's stage.Holocene shifts in the assembly of plant and animal communities implicate human impacts.The macroecological contribution to global change solutions.Comparative phylogeography of eastern chipmunks and white-footed mice in relation to the individualistic nature of species.Biotic interactions and macroevolution: extensions and mismatches across scales and levels.Ecological persistence interrupted in Caribbean coral reefs.Emergence patterns of novelty in European vegetation assemblages over the past 15 000 years.Wind and rain are the primary climate factors driving changing phenology of an aerial insectivore.Development and application of a pollen-based paleohydrologic reconstruction from the Lower Roanoke River Basin, North Carolina, USAVegetation history in central Kentucky and Tennessee (USA) during the last glacial and deglacial periodsRange expansion and enemy recruitment by eight alien gall wasp species in BritainReconstructing the Pleistocene geography of the Aphelocoma jays (Corvidae)Going beyond limitations of plant functional types when predicting global ecosystem-atmosphere fluxes: exploring the merits of traits-based approachesEuropean glacial relict snails and plants: environmental context of their modern refugial occurrence in southern SiberiaFuture no-analogue vegetation produced by no-analogue combinations of temperature and insolationIdentifying the pollen of an extinct spruce species in the Late Quaternary sediments of the Tunica Hills region, south-eastern United StatesPerspective: Ecological Novelty is not NewConservation and Resource Management in a Changing World: Extending Historical Range of Variation Beyond the BaselineImpacts of climate change on species, populations and communities: palaeobiogeographical insights and frontiersPollen-based continental climate reconstructions at 6 and 21 ka: a global synthesisUnexpected biodiversity loss under global warming in the neotropical Guayana Highlands: a preliminary appraisalLow- and high-frequency climate variability in eastern Beringia during the past 25 000 yearsThis article is one of a series of papers published in this Special Issue on the theme Polar Climate Stability NetworkModern diatom assemblages from Chilean tidal marshes and their application for quantifying deformation during past great earthquakesTime continuum and true long-term ecology: from theory to practicePotential natural vegetation and pre-anthropic pollen records on the Azores Islands in a Macaronesian contextPalaeobiodiversity and taxonomic resolution: linking past trends with present patternsModern pollen—vegetation relationships along an altitudinal transect in the central Pyrenees (southwestern Europe)
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MODERN ANALOGS IN QUATERNARY PALEOECOLOGY: Here Today, Gone Yesterday, Gone Tomorrow?
description
article
@en
im Mai 2004 veröffentlichter wissenschaftlicher Artikel
@de
wetenschappelijk artikel
@nl
наукова стаття, опублікована в травні 2004
@uk
name
MODERN ANALOGS IN QUATERNARY PALEOECOLOGY: Here Today, Gone Yesterday, Gone Tomorrow?
@en
MODERN ANALOGS IN QUATERNARY PALEOECOLOGY: Here Today, Gone Yesterday, Gone Tomorrow?
@nl
type
label
MODERN ANALOGS IN QUATERNARY PALEOECOLOGY: Here Today, Gone Yesterday, Gone Tomorrow?
@en
MODERN ANALOGS IN QUATERNARY PALEOECOLOGY: Here Today, Gone Yesterday, Gone Tomorrow?
@nl
prefLabel
MODERN ANALOGS IN QUATERNARY PALEOECOLOGY: Here Today, Gone Yesterday, Gone Tomorrow?
@en
MODERN ANALOGS IN QUATERNARY PALEOECOLOGY: Here Today, Gone Yesterday, Gone Tomorrow?
@nl
P1476
MODERN ANALOGS IN QUATERNARY PALEOECOLOGY: Here Today, Gone Yesterday, Gone Tomorrow?
@en
P2093
John W. Williams
Stephen T. Jackson
P304
P356
10.1146/ANNUREV.EARTH.32.101802.120435
P407
P577
2004-05-19T00:00:00Z