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1. Severity of topsoil compaction controls the impact of skid trails on soil ecological processes.

2. Rapid evolution of flower phenology and clonality in restored populations of multiple grassland species.

3. Nitrogen availability and plant functional composition modify biodiversity‐multifunctionality relationships.

4. A novel, post‐Soviet fire disturbance regime drives bird diversity and abundance on the Eurasian steppe.

5. Increasing plant species richness by seeding has marginal effects on ecosystem functioning in agricultural grasslands.

6. Reduction of invertebrate herbivory by land use is only partly explained by changes in plant and insect characteristics.

7. Assessing and improving the transferability of current global spatial prediction models.

8. Post‐Soviet fire and grazing regimes govern the abundance of a key ecosystem engineer on the Eurasian steppe, the yellow ground squirrel Spermophilus fulvus.

9. Microbial drivers of plant richness and productivity in a grassland restoration experiment along a gradient of land‐use intensity.

10. Fallow deer foraging alone does not preserve the vegetation of traditionally sheep‐grazed calcareous grasslands.

11. Nitrogen limitation reduces the performance of target plant species in restored meadows.

12. Soil conditions drive below‐ground trait space in temperate agricultural grasslands.

13. Establishment of wildflower strips in a wide range of environments: a lesson from a landscape‐scale project.

14. Grassland restoration on former arable land: Fine-scale grass accumulation and damaged soil conditions limit species establishment.

15. Fire disturbance promotes biodiversity of plants, lichens and birds in the Siberian subarctic tundra.

16. Will I stay or will I go? Plant species‐specific response and tolerance to high land‐use intensity in temperate grassland ecosystems

17. Grassland reclamation of a copper mine tailings facility: Long‐term effects of biosolids on plant community responses.

18. Resource pre‐emption, rather than extending the growing season of native grass assemblages, reduces invasion by exotic species.

19. Restoration of plant diversity in permanent grassland by seeding: Assessing the limiting factors along land‐use gradients.

20. Is there local adaptation in plant species to soil reaction? A lesson from a multispecies experiment.

21. Linking insect herbivory with plant traits: Phylogenetically structured trait syndromes matter.

22. Contribution of the soil seed bank to the restoration of temperate grasslands by mechanical sward disturbance

23. East Asian buntings: Ongoing illegal trade and encouraging conservation responses.

24. Post-Soviet shifts in grazing and fire regimes changed the functional plant community composition on the Eurasian steppe.

25. Quantifying the relationship between soil seed bank and plant community assemblage in sites harboring the threatened Ivesia webberi in the western Great Basin Desert.

26. Heterogeneity decreases as time since fire increases in a South American grassland.

27. Establishment of a desert foundation species is limited by exotic plants and light but not herbivory or water.

28. Declining human pressure and opportunities for rewilding in the steppes of Eurasia.

29. Response of grassland vegetation composition to different fertilizer treatments recorded over ten years following 64 years of fertilizer applications in the Rengen Grassland Experiment.

30. Integrating knowledge of ecological succession into invasive alien plant management: A case study from Portugal.

31. Livestock browsing affects the species composition and structure of cloud forest in the Dhofar Mountains of Oman.

32. Decomposition disentangled: A test of the multiple mechanisms by which nitrogen enrichment alters litter decomposition.

33. Marmots from space: assessing population size and habitat use of a burrowing mammal using publicly available satellite images.

34. Strategies to persist in the community: Soil seed bank and above‐ground vegetation in Patagonian pine plantations.

35. High resistance of plant biodiversity to moderate native woody encroachment in loess steppe grassland fragments.

36. Recovery of ecosystem functions after experimental disturbance in 73 grasslands differing in land‐use intensity, plant species richness and community composition.

37. Changes in vegetation composition and structure following livestock exclusion in a temperate fluvial wetland.

38. Plant functional trait shifts explain concurrent changes in the structure and function of grassland soil microbial communities.

39. Strengths and potential pitfalls of hay transfer for ecological restoration revealed by RAD‐seq analysis in floodplain Arabis species.

40. Global patterns of intraspecific leaf trait responses to elevation.

41. The type of nutrient limitation affects the plant species richness–productivity relationship: Evidence from dry grasslands across Eurasia.

42. Interactions between cattle grazing, plant diversity, and soil nitrogen in a northeastern U.S. coastal grassland.

43. Emergent wetland vegetation data recording: Does an optimal period exist?

44. Translocation of meadow, heath and fen to the Habitat Garden: The first insights after 4 years of the experiment.

45. Towards the development of general rules describing landscape heterogeneity–multifunctionality relationships.

46. Invasive Asclepias syriaca can have facilitative effects on native grass establishment in a water‐stressed ecosystem.

47. A 5‐year rotational grazing changes the botanical composition of sub‐alpine and alpine grasslands.

48. Land use intensity, rather than plant species richness, affects the leaching risk of multiple nutrients from permanent grasslands.

49. Does plant diversity affect the water balance of established grassland systems?

50. Quantitative mesophyll parameters rather than whole-leaf traits predict response of C3 steppe plants to aridity.

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