Fast-slow continuum and reproductive strategies structure plant life-history variation worldwide.

PubWeight™: 0.83‹?›

🔗 View Article (PMID 26699477)

Published in Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A on December 22, 2015

Authors

Roberto Salguero-Gómez1, Owen R Jones2, Eelke Jongejans3, Simon P Blomberg4, David J Hodgson5, Cyril Mbeau-Ache6, Pieter A Zuidema7, Hans de Kroon8, Yvonne M Buckley9

Author Affiliations

1: School of Biological Sciences, Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia QLD 4072, Australia; Evolutionary Demography Laboratory, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Rostock 18057, Germany; r.salguero@uq.edu.au.
2: Max Planck Odense Center on the Biodemography of Aging, University of Southern Denmark, Odense M 5230, Denmark; Department of Biology, University of Southern Denmark, Odense M 5230, Denmark;
3: Department of Animal Ecology and Physiology, Institute for Water and Wetland Research, Radboud University, Nijmegen 6500 GL, The Netherlands;
4: School of Biological Sciences, Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia QLD 4072, Australia;
5: Centre for Ecology and Conservation, University of Exeter, Tremough TR10 9EZ, United Kingdom;
6: School of Biological Sciences, Plymouth University, Plymouth PL4 8AA, United Kingdom;
7: Forest Ecology and Forest Management Group, Wageningen University, Wageningen 6700 AA, The Netherlands;
8: Department of Experimental Plant Ecology, Institute for Water and Wetland Research, Radboud University, Nijmegen 6500 GL, The Netherlands;
9: School of Biological Sciences, Centre for Biodiversity and Conservation Science, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia QLD 4072, Australia; School of Natural Sciences Trinity College Dublin, University of Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland; Trinity Centre for Biodiversity Research, Zoology, Trinity College Dublin, University of Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland.

Articles cited by this

The worldwide leaf economics spectrum. Nature (2004) 20.42

Phylogenetic analysis and comparative data: a test and review of evidence. Am Nat (2002) 10.78

Towards a worldwide wood economics spectrum. Ecol Lett (2009) 6.00

Longevity can buffer plant and animal populations against changing climatic variability. Ecology (2008) 3.12

Size-correction and principal components for interspecific comparative studies. Evolution (2009) 2.41

Hibernation in black bears: independence of metabolic suppression from body temperature. Science (2011) 2.27

The fast-slow continuum in mammalian life history: an empirical reevaluation. Am Nat (2007) 2.23

Demographic compensation and tipping points in climate-induced range shifts. Nature (2010) 2.13

Why evolutionary biologists should be demographers. Trends Ecol Evol (2006) 2.08

Queen succession through asexual reproduction in termites. Science (2009) 1.97

A general quantitative theory of forest structure and dynamics. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2009) 1.81

A molecular basis for natural selection at the timeless locus in Drosophila melanogaster. Science (2007) 1.77

Functional traits explain variation in plant life history strategies. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A (2013) 1.47

How do plant ecologists use matrix population models? Ecol Lett (2010) 1.41

OneZoom: a fractal explorer for the tree of life. PLoS Biol (2012) 1.38

Generation time: a reliable metric to measure life-history variation among mammalian populations. Am Nat (2005) 1.37

Matrix dimensions bias demographic inferences: implications for comparative plant demography. Am Nat (2010) 0.96

Projecting rates of spread for invasive species. Risk Anal (2004) 0.95

Potentially immortal? New Phytol (2010) 0.93

Reproductive and thyroid hormone profiles in captive Western fence lizards (Sceloporus occidentalis) after a period of brumation. Zoo Biol (2008) 0.85

Influence of life-history tactics on transient dynamics: a comparative analysis across mammalian populations. Am Nat (2014) 0.85

Hydraulically integrated or modular? Comparing whole-plant-level hydraulic systems between two desert shrub species with different growth forms. New Phytol (2009) 0.83

A hydraulic explanation for size-specific plant shrinkage: developmental hydraulic sectoriality. New Phytol (2010) 0.83

Multilocus coalescent analyses reveal the demographic history and speciation patterns of mouse lemur sister species. BMC Evol Biol (2014) 0.81

Small RNAs of Sequoia sempervirens during rejuvenation and phase change. Plant Biol (Stuttg) (2012) 0.80

Developmental biology: A cellular view of regeneration. Nature (2009) 0.78

Malaria: How vector mosquitoes beat the heat. Nature (2014) 0.77