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Auteur Stefan Dullinger |
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur (10)
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est un extrait de Biodiversity and climate change : achieving the 2020 targets / Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (2010)
Titre : Climate change threats to biodiversity in Germany and Austria Type de document : Extrait d'ouvrage Auteurs : Stefan Nehring ; Ingrid Kleinbauer ; Stefan Dullinger ; Franz Essl (1973-) ; Frank Klingenstein ; Rudolf May Année de publication : 2010 Importance : p. 57-59 Langues : Français (fre) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=85760 Nehring, Stefan, Kleinbauer, Ingrid, Dullinger, Stefan, Essl, Franz (1973-), Klingenstein, Frank, May, Rudolf 2010 Climate change threats to biodiversity in Germany and Austria. In: Biodiversity and climate change : achieving the 2020 targets. SCBD, Montreal: 57-59.Documents numériques
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Résumé (2010)Adobe Acrobat PDF A conceptual framework for range-expanding species that track human-induced environmental change / Franz Essl in BioScience, 69 (11) (2019)
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Titre : A conceptual framework for range-expanding species that track human-induced environmental change Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Franz Essl (1973-) ; Stefan Dullinger ; Piero Genovesi (1960-) ; Philip Eric Hulme ; Jonathan M. Jeschke ; Stelios Katsanevakis ; Ingolf Kühn ; Bernd Lenzner ; Aníbal Pauchard ; Petr Pyšek ; Wolfgang Rabitsch (1968-) ; David Mark Richardson (1958-) ; Hanno Seebens ; Mark van Kleunen (1973-) ; Wim H. Van der Putten ; Montserrat Vilà ; Sven Bacher Année de publication : 2019 Article en page(s) : 908-919 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [LOTERRE-Biodiversité] Changement climatique
[CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantesRésumé : For many species, human-induced environmental changes are important indirect drivers of range expansion into new regions. We argue that it is important to distinguish the range dynamics of such species from those that occur without, or with less clear, involvement of human-induced environmental changes. We elucidate the salient features of the rapid increase in the number of species whose range dynamics are human induced, and review the relationships and differences to both natural range expansion and biological invasions. We discuss the consequences for science, policy and management in an era of rapid global change and highlight four key challenges relating to basic gaps in knowledge, and the transfer of scientific understanding to biodiversity management and policy. We conclude that range-expanding species responding to human-induced environmental change will become an essential feature for biodiversity management and science in the Anthropocene. Finally, we propose the term neonative for these taxa. Lien pérenne : DOI : 10.1093/biosci/biz101 Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=149364
in BioScience > 69 (11) (2019) . - 908-919Essl, Franz (1973-), Dullinger, Stefan, Genovesi, Piero (1960-), Hulme, Philip Eric, Jeschke, Jonathan M., Katsanevakis, Stelios, Kühn, Ingolf, Lenzner, Bernd, Pauchard, Aníbal, Pyšek, Petr, Rabitsch, Wolfgang (1968-), Richardson, David Mark (1958-), Seebens, Hanno, Kleunen, Mark van (1973-), Van der Putten, Wim H., Vilà, Montserrat, Bacher, Sven 2019 A conceptual framework for range-expanding species that track human-induced environmental change. BioScience, 69(11): 908-919.Documents numériques
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Article (2019)URL Extinction debts and colonization credits of non-forest plants in the European Alps / Sabine B. Rumpf in Nature communications, 8 (2017)
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Titre : Extinction debts and colonization credits of non-forest plants in the European Alps Type de document : Électronique Auteurs : Sabine B. Rumpf ; Karl Hülber ; Johannes Wessely ; Wolfgang Willner ; Dietmar Moser ; Andreas Gattringer ; Günther Klonner ; Niklaus E. Zimmermann ; Stefan Dullinger Année de publication : 2017 Article en page(s) : 1-9 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Colonisation
[CBNPMP-Thématique] Démographie, écologie des populations (dynamique des populations, démécologie)
[CBNPMP-Thématique] Extinction, régressionRésumé : Mountain plant species shift their elevational ranges in response to climate change. However, to what degree these shifts lag behind current climate change, and to what extent delayed extinctions and colonizations contribute to these shifts, are under debate. Here, we calculate extinction debt and colonization credit of 135 species from the European Alps by comparing species distribution models with 1576 re-surveyed plots. We find extinction debt in 60% and colonization credit in 38% of the species, and at least one of the two in 93%. This suggests that the realized niche of very few of the 135 species fully tracks climate change. As expected, extinction debts occur below and colonization credits occur above the optimum elevation of species. Colonization credits are more frequent in warmth-demanding species from lower elevations with lower dispersal capability, and extinction debts are more frequent in cold- adapted species from the highest elevations. Local extinctions hence appear to be already pending for those species which have the least opportunity to escape climate warming. Lien pérenne : DOI : 10.1038/s41467-019-12343-x Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=143458
in Nature communications > 8 (2017) . - 1-9Rumpf, Sabine B., Hülber, Karl, Wessely, Johannes, Willner, Wolfgang, Moser, Dietmar, Gattringer, Andreas, Klonner, Günther, Zimmermann, Niklaus E., Dullinger, Stefan 2017 Extinction debts and colonization credits of non-forest plants in the European Alps. Nature communications, 8: 1-9.Documents numériques
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Article (2017)URL Hiking trails as conduits for the spread of non-native species in mountain areas / Rebecca Liedtke in Biological invasions, 22 (2020)
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Titre : Hiking trails as conduits for the spread of non-native species in mountain areas Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Rebecca Liedtke ; Agustina Barros ; Franz Essl (1973-) ; Jonas J. Lembrechts ; Ronja E.M. Wedegärtner ; Aníbal Pauchard ; Stefan Dullinger Année de publication : 2020 Article en page(s) : 1121-1134 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Enjeux de conservation des lacs d'altitude
[CBNPMP-Thématique] Sports et activités de pleine natureRésumé : Roadsides are major pathways of plant invasions in mountain regions. However, the increasing importance of tourism may also turn hiking trails into conduits of non-native plant spread to remote mountain landscapes. Here, we evaluated the importance of such trails for plant invasion in five protected mountain areas of southern central Chile. We therefore sampled native and non-native species along 17 trails and in the adjacent undisturbed vegetation. We analyzed whether the number and cover of non-native species in local plant assemblages is related to distance to trail and a number of additional variables that characterize the abiotic and biotic environment as well as the usage of the trail. We found that non-native species at higher elevations are a subset of the lowland source pool and that their number and cover decreases with increasing elevation and with distance to trails, although this latter variable only explained 4–8% of the variation in the data. In addition, non-native richness and cover were positively correlated with signs of livestock presence but negatively with the presence of intact forest vegetation. These results suggest that, at least in the region studied, hiking trails have indeed fostered non-native species spread to higher elevations, although less efficiently than roadsides. As a corollary, appropriate planning and management of trails could become increasingly important to control plant invasions into mountains in a world which is warming and where visitation and recreational use of mountainous areas is expected to increase. Lien pérenne : DOI : 10.1007/s10530-019-02165-9 Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=150797
in Biological invasions > 22 (2020) . - 1121-1134Liedtke, Rebecca, Barros, Agustina, Essl, Franz (1973-), Lembrechts, Jonas J., Wedegärtner, Ronja E.M., Pauchard, Aníbal, Dullinger, Stefan 2020 Hiking trails as conduits for the spread of non-native species in mountain areas. Biological invasions, 22: 1121-1134.Documents numériques
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Article (2020)URL Multi-scale patterns in plant species richness of European high mountain vegetation / Risto Virtanen (2002)
Titre : Multi-scale patterns in plant species richness of European high mountain vegetation Type de document : Extrait d'ouvrage Auteurs : Risto Virtanen ; Thomas Dirnböck ; Stefan Dullinger ; Harald Pauli ; Markus Staudinger ; Georg Grabherr (1946-) Année de publication : 2002 Importance : p. 91-102 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Biodiversité
[CBNPMP-Géographique] EuropePermalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=84944 Virtanen, Risto, Dirnböck, Thomas, Dullinger, Stefan, Pauli, Harald, Staudinger, Markus, Grabherr, Georg (1946-) 2002 Multi-scale patterns in plant species richness of European high mountain vegetation. In: Mountain biodiversity : a global assesment. The Parthenon publishing group, Londres: 91-102.Naturalized alien flora of the world: species diversity, taxonomic and phylogenetic patterns, geographic distribution and global hotspots of plant invasion / Petr Pyšek in Preslia, 89 (2017)
PermalinkNo saturation in the accumulation of alien species worldwide / Hanno Seebens in Nature communications, 8 (2017)
PermalinkRange dynamics of mountain plants decrease with elevation / Sabine B. Rumpf in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 115 (8) (2018)
PermalinkSocioeconomic legacy yields an invasion debt / Franz Essl in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 108 (1) (2011)
PermalinkVegetation classification and biogeography of European floodplain forests and alder carrs / Jan Douda in Applied vegetation science, 18 (11/2015)
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