Search

Your search keyword '"Yu, Kailiang"' showing total 17 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Yu, Kailiang" Remove constraint Author: "Yu, Kailiang" Search Limiters Peer Reviewed Remove constraint Search Limiters: Peer Reviewed Publisher springer nature Remove constraint Publisher: springer nature
17 results on '"Yu, Kailiang"'

Search Results

1. Seasonal precipitation and soil microbial community influence plant growth response to warming and N addition in a desert steppe.

2. CAM plant expansion favored indirectly by asymmetric climate warming and increased rainfall variability.

3. The competitive advantage of C4 grasses over CAM plants under increased rainfall variability.

4. Response of a facultative CAM plant and its competitive relationship with a grass to changes in rainfall regime.

5. The Effects of Interannual Rainfall Variability on Tree-Grass Composition Along Kalahari Rainfall Gradient.

6. Effects of competition on induction of crassulacean acid metabolism in a facultative CAM plant.

7. When variability outperforms the mean: trait plasticity predicts plant cover and biomass in an alpine wetland.

8. Modeled hydraulic redistribution in tree-grass, CAM-grass, and tree-CAM associations: the implications of crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM).

9. Accelerated deforestation driven by large-scale land acquisitions in Cambodia.

10. Plant species richness is not consistently associated with productivity in experimental subalpine meadow plant communities.

11. Direct and Indirect Facilitation of Plants with Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM).

12. Integrating multiple plant functional traits to predict ecosystem productivity.

13. Hydraulic vulnerability difference between branches and roots increases with environmental aridity.

14. High rainfall frequency promotes the dominance of biocrust under low annual rainfall.

15. The Enemy of My Enemy Hypothesis: Why Coexisting with Grasses May Be an Adaptive Strategy for Savanna Trees.

16. Tree rings reveal hydroclimatic fingerprints of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation on the Tibetan Plateau.

17. Soil potential labile but not occluded phosphorus forms increase with forest succession.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources