In deep shade, elevated CO2 increases the vigor of tropical climbing plants
- 30 September 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Global Change Biology
- Vol. 8 (11), 1109-1117
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2486.2002.00533.x
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Community Characteristics of Early Recovery Vegetation on Abandoned Lands of Shifting Cultivation in Bawangling of Hainan Island, South ChinaJournal of Integrative Plant Biology, 2005
- Tree seedling responses to in situ CO2‐enrichment differ among species and depend on understorey light availabilityGlobal Change Biology, 2000
- EARLY VS. ASYMPTOTIC GROWTH RESPONSES OF HERBACEOUS PLANTS TO ELEVATED CO2Ecology, 1999
- In situ responses to elevated CO2 in tropical forest understorey plantsFunctional Ecology, 1998
- Increasing Turnover Through Time in Tropical ForestsScience, 1994
- Interspecific variation in the growth response of plants to an elevated ambient CO2 concentrationPlant Ecology, 1993
- Successional Status, Seed Size, and Responses of Tree Seedlings to CO^2, Light, and NutrientsEcology, 1993
- Allocation Patterns in Two Tropical Vines in Response to Increased Atmospheric CO 2Functional Ecology, 1992
- Effect of the Long-Term Elevation of CO2 Concentration in the Field on the Quantum Yield of Photosynthesis of the C3 Sedge, Scirpus olneyiPlant Physiology, 1991
- Lianas as Structural Parasites: The Bursera Simaruba ExampleEcology, 1987