Publications
Haug, I.; Setaro, S. & Suarez, J.P. (2013): Reforestation sites show similar and nested AMF communities to an adjacent pristine forest in a tropical mountain area of South Ecuador . PLOS ONE 8, e63524
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0063524.
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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0063524.
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Abstract:
Arbuscular mycorrhizae are important for growth a...
Abstract:
Arbuscular mycorrhizae are important for growth and survival of tropical trees. We studied the community of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi in a tropical mountain rain forest and in neighbouring reforestation plots in the area of Reserva Biológica San Francisco (South Ecuador). The arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi were analysed with molecular methods sequencing part of the 18S rDNA. The sequences were classified as Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs). We found high fungal species richness with OTUs belonging to Glomerales, Diversisporales and Archaeosporales. Despite intensive sampling, the rarefaction curves are still unsaturated for the pristine forest and the reforestation plots. The communities consisted of few frequent and many rare species. No specific interactions are recognizable. The plant individuals are associated with one to ten arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and mostly with one to four. The fungal compositions associated with single plant individuals show a great variability and variety within one plant species. Planted and naturally occurring plants show high similarities in their fungal communities. Pristine forest and reforestation plots showed similar richness, similar diversity and a significantly nested structure of plant-AMF community. The results indicate that small-scale fragmentation presently found in this area has not destroyed the natural AMF community, at least yet. Thus, the regeneration potential of natural forest vegetation at the tested sites is not inhibited by a lack of appropriate mycobionts.
Brehm, G.; Strutzenberger, P. & Fiedler, K. (2013): Phylogenetic diversity of geometrid moths decreases with elevation in the tropical Andes. Ecography 36, 001-007.
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Species diversity of geometrid moths (Lepidoptera...
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Species diversity of geometrid moths (Lepidoptera, Geometridae) has previously been shown to be extremely and constantly high along a continuously forested elevational gradient in the Andes of southern Ecuador. We analysed samples taken from 32 sites between 1999 and 2011 in northern Podocarpus National Park and adjacent areas from 1020 to 2916 m a.s.l. We conjecture that high elevation habitats were historically mostly colonised by species from lower elevations, and that environmental filtering (e.g. through host plant specificity or temperature tolerance) constrained colonisation from lower elevations, which would yield a pattern of elevationally decreasing phylogenetic diversity. We analysed elevational phylogenetic patterns by means of: 1) the nearest-taxon index (NTI), 2) DNA barcode-based terminal branch lengths (TBLs) from maximum-likelihood phylogeny, 3) the subfamily composition of the local assemblages, and 4), the rarefied number of morphologically defined genera per site. We counted a total of 1445 species. NTI values significantly increased with elevation, both in a conventional and a rarefaction approach. TBLs decreased significantly with elevation. Subfamily composition profoundly changed with elevation, particularly expressed as an increased proportion of the subfamily Larentiinae and decreased fractions of Sterrhinae and Geometrinae. The number of genera in equally rarefied species resamples significantly decreased with elevation. We conclude that environmental filtering indeed contributed to an altitudinal decrease in moth phylodiversity, but these constraints prevented only relatively few clades from colonising high elevation habitats.
Jantz, N.; Homeier, J.; León Yánez, S.; Moscoso, A. & Behling, H. (2013): Trapping pollen in the tropics — Comparing modern pollen rain spectra of different pollen traps and surface samples across Andean vegetation zones. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 193, 57-69
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.revpalbo.2013.01.011.
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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.revpalbo.2013.01.011.
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Keywords: |
pollen analysis |
Paramo |
pollen |
tropical montane forest |
Modern pollen rain |
Behling trap |
Modern Oldfield trap |
Villota, A.; León Yánez, S. & Behling, H. (2012): Vegetation and environmental dynamics in the Páramo of Jimbura region in the southeastern Ecuadorian Andes during the late Quaternary. Journal of South American Earth Sciences 40, 85-93
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsames.2012.09.010.
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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsames.2012.09.010.
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Keywords: |
palynology |
Pleistocene |
Holocene |
South Ecuador |
Páramo |
Paramo |
Palaeoecology |
pollen |
Pena Herrera, J.M. (2013): Response of N, P, organic C and Cl concentrations in soil solution to varying precipitation in a tropical montane rain forest of Ecuador University of Berne, Geographic Institute, master thesis
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Abstract:
The current climate change in the tropical Andean...
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The current climate change in the tropical Andean rain forests in south Ecuador alters the distribution of rain events with increasing dry and wet phases. The present research focuses on the concentration response of some elements to signicant changes on rainfall distribution. It seeks to determine whether changes in the concentrations of elements in an ecosystem of a rainforest are an eect of dilution by precipitation or other factors that may be aecting these variations, such as microbiological activities. The study examines chloride, ammonium, nitrate, phosphate, total organic carbon (TOC), dissolved organic nitrogen (DON), and dissolved organic phosphorus (DOP) in soil solution as well as the ratio of organic nitrogen to organic carbon (C : N) in soil solution samples taken in a tropical rain forest of Ecuador. Soil samples were taken weekly from 1998 to 2007, both below the organic layer and 15 and 30 cm into the mineral layer. Concentrations were measured with a chloride electrode , Continuous Flow Analyzer (CFA for ammonium, nitrate, DON, and DOP) and Total Organic Carbon Analyzer. The results were analyzed with statistical software packages R and SPSS using statistical methods of descriptive statistics and ANOVA. The average weekly precipitation was 38.73 mm and weekly precipitation varied between 0 and 155.2 mm. The variation of chloride concentrations served as reference to detect dilution/concentration effects of the other elements because it is assumed that chloride concentrations behave inversely proportional to the volume of water in soil. Thus, the higher the precipitation the lower is the concentration of chloride in soil solutions. I found that the mineral elements presented similar concentration variations as chloride indicating the strong if not exclusive eect of dilution. The phosphate concentrations were an exception showing irregular variation. Measurement problems due to the low P concentrations, often below the detection limit of the instrument may be the explanation for such irregularities. The variation in chloride-normalized organic components diered from that of chloride. The concentrations of TOC, DON and C : N ratio showed a fairly steep increase with increasing precipitation, especially observable at 15 cm depth in the mineral soil and in some cases also at 30 cm depth. A small TOC consumption by the microbial community during rewetting, a strong microbial TOC production or increased leaching of TOC to the mineral soil are possible explanations for this result. My results demonstrate that the response of inorganic N and P species is mainly driven by concentration/dilution eects while for organic compounds microbial activity in relation to soil moisture was an additional factor controlling the concentrations.
Keywords: |
hydrochemistry |
Q2 |
ECSF |
mineral N |
nitrogen |
nitrate |
soil solution |
phosphorus |
DOC |
climate change |
Utiger, C. (2013): Der wassergebundene Phosphorkreislauf in einem tropischen Bergwaldökosystem: Konzentrationen, Flüsse und zeitliche Trends Geographisches Institut, Universität Bern, bachelor thesis
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Abstract:
Um das Vorhandensein und den Transport chemischer...
Abstract:
Um das Vorhandensein und den Transport chemischer Elemente auf der Erde zu beschreiben, wird das Konzept der biogeochemischen Kreisläufe angewandt. Ein solches Element ist Phosphor, das wegen seiner Wichtigkeit als limitierendes oder co-limiterendes Element für das Pflanzenwachstum in tropischen Regenwäldern ausgewählt wurde. Am Beispiel eines Einzugsgebietes im tropischen Bergregenwald von Ecuador wird untersucht, wie sich die Phosphorkonzentrationen und Phosphorflüsse entlang des wassergebundenen Kresilaufs vom Freilandniederschlag bis hin zum Oberflächenabfluss sowohl zeitlich wie auch räumlich verhalten. Die untersuchten Daten umfassen die Wasserflüsse und die Konzentrationen von Orthophosphat und totalem gelösten Phosphat zwischen 1998 und 2010 als monatliche Mittel. Die räumliche Verteilung wird mit der Darstellung der Messwerte in Boxplots und der Suche nach räumlichen Mustern analysiert. Um nach saisonalen Prozessen zu suchen, wird einerseits ein lineares Modell, bestehend aus einer Sinus- und einer Cosinus-Funktion gebildet und auf Signfikanz und Aussagekraft, d.h. Erklärung der Variabilität durch das Modell anhang des Anteils an der Gesamtvariation getestet. Anderseits wird die Autokorrelation der Daten auf ein saisonales Muster untersucht. Ein allfälliger langfristiger Trend wird mit dem saisonalen Kendall-Test gesucht. Bei der Analyse der räumlichen Verteilung zeigt sich, dass sich die größten Phosphor-Konzentrationen und -Flüsse zwischen Bestandesniederschlag und organischer Auflage bewegen. Zudem ist der Eintrag durch den Freilandniederschlag größer als der Austrag im Oberflächenabfluss. Bei allen Wasserflüssen wurde eine jährliche Saisonalität festgestellt. Bei den Konzentrationen ist ein antizyklisches Verhalten zu den Wasserflüssen zu erkennen. Der Freilandniederschlag weist keine Saisonalität auf. Die größten Saisonalitäten sind zwischen Krone und organischer Auflage zu finden. Die Konzentrationen in den Saugkerzen und im Oberflächenabfluss sind nur schwach durch saisonale Prozesse geprägt. Bei den Flüssen zeigt nur der Bestandesniederschlag deutlich jährliche Saisonalität. Die Analyse der zeitlichen Trends zeigte keine langfristigen Trends, die auf eine Änderung externer Faktoren zurückzuführen sind. Interne Veränderungen im Pflanzenwachstum könnten für eine Zunahme im Stammabfluss und eine Abnahme der Lysimeterkonzentrationen (unter der organischen Auflage) verantwortlich sein. Bei der Analyse der Feueraktivität als möglicher Quelle für Phosphoreintrag wurden einzelne signifikante Beziehungen mit den Phosphorkonzentrationen gefunden.
Hertel, T. (2012): Tree Seed Procurement and Management in the Province of Loja Institute of Silviculture, Technische Universität München, master thesis
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Abstract:
South America hosts 22% of the world´s forests wi...
Abstract:
South America hosts 22% of the world´s forests with its unique biological diversity. Among all countries Ecuador is considered being the country with the highest biodiversity. But unsustainable land use and forestry practices threaten this diversity. Up to today Ecuador has the highest deforestation rate of the South American continent. To combate against those high forest losses wide-ranged reforestation has to take place but is still lacking in Ecuador. The reforestation efforts up to now do not compensate the high losses in forest cover. 90% (3500ha) of the annual reforestation in Ecuador is taking place in the Andean region (FAO 2006, 2011). A common tool to reinstall the forest cover is plantings. To this day 140,000 ha of forest plantations exist in the Andes of Ecuador. The commonly used species are Eucalyptus globulus, Pinus radiata and Pinus patula. Just recently Ecuadorian organizations paid particular attention to tree species native to Ecuador and their reforestation potential. The major obstacle to use native species on a larger scale for reforestation is the lack of adequate knowledge about their physiological and silvicultural traits. Information about appropriate seed storage, propagation methods and silvicultural treatment options has to be acquiered, applied and its experience communicated. Tree seed programs provide a valuable framework to deal with such sets of questions and research needs. The Danish International Development Agency (DANIDA) has over 50 years of experience in the development and establishment of national tree seed programs. Their development framework is used as an orientation in the course of this thesis to frame a regional seed program for the provincial region of Loja. The general objectives of this thesis are to evaluate the current seed procurement and management methods in the Province of Loja and to develop a concept for regional seed program for the province of Loja which is practicable and adapted to the local circumstances. Data on the current practices was gathered through a questionnaire survey and structured observation among the provincial tree nurseries. National and regional forestry strategies and plans were revised to understand the encountered situation. To develop the regional seed program the national tree seed program framework from Danida was consulted. This study assesses the main areas of improvement of the provincial seed management and highlights local facts in need for special consideration in the scope of a regional seed program. Furthermore essential parts and how to best implement those in a regional seed program are discussed. Major results involve the formulation of four main areas of improvement common for all surveyed tree nurseries of the province: Infrastructure, workforce, documentation and seed handling itself. The individual performances of the nurseries were ranked to get a clearer picture about the production efficiency. The survey also revealed the variety of tree species produced. Regarding the regional seed program the results picture the Gobierno Provincial de Loja (GPL) as a suitable entity to be in charge of the program. Moreover important stakeholders beneficiary for the program were detected and an exemplary distribution of activities among them was conducted. The principal contributions of this thesis consist in conducting a systematic evaluation of the current status of the seed sector in southern Ecuador and particularly in the Province of Loja for the first time, and in providing the provincial government with an elaborated concept to improve the seed management. Additionally the developed ranking scheme can serve as a guideline for further nursery performance evaluations.
Keywords: |
native species |
reforestation |
tropical montane forest |
Biodiversity conservation |
tree seeds |
DFG Research Unit 816 (2013): TMF Newsletter, Issue 19. Laboratory for Climatology and Remote Sensing (LCRS), University of Marburg, Marburg, Germany. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5678/lcrs/for816.cit.1233
Abstract:
20 groups of scientists representing a multitude ...
Abstract:
20 groups of scientists representing a multitude of scientific disciplines summarize major results of their research in this last issue of the TMF Newsletter: They report about science-directed and sustainable land-use systems and present protocols for optimization of sustainable forest and pasture management. Specific reactions of species and of the ecosystem tropical mountain forest (TMF) to increasing loads of nutrient input are shown. The researchers also summarize effects of altered precipitation and temperatures on nitrogen fluxes as well as on plant and animal diversity. They furthermore improved their hydrological models of water fluxes. Landscape parameters and forest dynamics were analyzed to improve landslide models. New animal species and mycorrhiza types are presented, mycorrhiza biomass were determined, and it was analyzed which mycorrhizae foster young trees. How environmental change influences climate and the ecosystem is demonstrated. The milestones achieved in the data warehouse are visualized. The researchers also offer new methods and introduce species to successfully monitor global change impacts.
Windhorst, D.; Waltz, T.; Timbe, E.; Frede, H. & Breuer, L. (2013): Impact of elevation and weather patterns on the isotopic composition of precipitation in a tropical montane rainforest. Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci. 177, 409-419
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/hess-17-409-2013.
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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/hess-17-409-2013.
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Abstract:
This study presents the spatial and temporal vari...
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This study presents the spatial and temporal variability of ?18O and ?2H isotope signatures in precipitation of a south Ecuadorian montane cloud forest catchment (San Francisco catchment). From 2 September to 25 December 2010, event sampling of open rainfall was conducted along an altitudinal transect (1800 to 2800 m a.s.l.) to investigate possible effects of altitude and weather conditions on the isotope signature. The spatial variability is mainly affected by the altitude effect. The event based ?18O altitude effect for the study area averages ?0.22‰ × 100 m?1 (?2H: ?1.12‰ × 100 m?1). The temporal variability is mostly controlled by prevailing air masses. Precipitation during the times of prevailing southeasterly trade winds is significantly enriched in heavy isotopes compared to precipitation during other weather conditions. In the study area, weather during austral winter is commonly controlled by southeasterly trade winds. Since the Amazon Basin contributes large amounts of recycled moisture to these air masses, trade wind-related precipitation is enriched in heavy isotopes. We used deuterium excess to further evaluate the contribution of recycled moisture to precipitation. Analogously to the ?18O and ?2H values, deuterium excess is significantly higher in trade wind-related precipitation. Consequently, it is assumed that evaporated moisture is responsible for high concentrations of heavy isotopes during austral winter.
Bouanani, S. (2013): Aluminium in der Bodenlösung eines tropischen Bergregenwaldes in Südecuador: Auswirkungen von Staubeinträgen auf Al-Speziierung und Toxizität Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, diploma thesis
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Zu Beginn der Untersuchungen wurden im ersten Sch...
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Zu Beginn der Untersuchungen wurden im ersten Schritt die freien Aluminiumkonzentrationen mit Hilfe der Donnan Membran Technik bestimmt. Anschließend wurden im zweiten Schritt die gemessenen freien Aluminiumkonzentrationen mit den modellierten Aluminiumkonzentrationen verglichen. Hierbei stellte sich heraus, dass die Werte vergleichbar sind und somit das Programm Visuell Minteq zur Modellierung der Aluminiumspeziierung eingesetzt werden konnte. Es wurde weiter festgestellt, dass der Anteil des freien Aluminiums an der gesamten Aluminiumkonzentration mit der Bodentiefe zunimmt. Der Anteil des freien Aluminiums an der gesamten Al-Konzentration betrug in der Bodenlösung unterhalb der organischen Auflage in allen untersuchten Plots lediglich 0% bis 0,96% (Mittelwert 0,0451%), während er im Mineralboden, bedingt durch geringe DOC-Werte, zwischen 0% und 29,11% (15 cm Tiefe) sowie zwischen 0% und 36,88% (30 cm Tiefe) schwankte. Der dritte Schritt galt der Untersuchung des Ca/Al Verhältnisses. Das Ergebnis zeigte hier, dass das freie molare Ca2+/Al3+ Verhältnis durch die Calciumdüngung nur geringfügig beeinflusst wird und über dem von Cronan & Grigal (1995) als kritisch betrachtetem Wert von <1 liegt. Calcium tritt daher vermutlich als wachstumslimitierender Faktor auf. Eine direkte Aluminiumtoxizität ist in den untersuchten Bodenlösungen nicht bzw. nur in geringem Maße festzustellen gewesen
DFG Research Unit 816 (2012): TMF Newsletter, Issue 18. Laboratory for Climatology and Remote Sensing (LCRS), University of Marburg, Marburg, Germany. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5678/lcrs/for816.cit.1229
Abstract:
The speakers give a glimpse on the complex on-sit...
Abstract:
The speakers give a glimpse on the complex on-site review procedure of the projects which constitute the German part of the new Platform for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Monitoring and Research in South Ecuador. They also report about the Status Symposium which enjoyed a numerous audience. NCI reports about the application to the UNESCO for the first biosphere reserve in the Ecuadorian Western Cordillera comprising the entire ecological gradient from the Paramo to the Pacific. The Science News present an investigation of the famers’ preferences of land use options for the recultivation of abandoned agricultural areas. An analysis of nitrogen fixation shows why nutrient budgets should include the canopy. The data manager and the webmaster analyze the usage of the RU’s data warehouse.
Palomeque, X. (2012): Natural succession and tree plantation as alternatives for restoring abandoned lands in the Andes of Southern Ecuador: Aspects of facilitation and competition Technische Universität München, phd thesis
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Abstract:
Abandoned areas are emerging in many tropical reg...
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Abandoned areas are emerging in many tropical regions as a consequence of deforestation and unsustainable land-use. These lands can be restored by natural succession (passive) or reforestation (active). Both alternatives where analyzed on three dominant types of successional sites (recently abandoned Pasture, Bracken, Shrub) in the tropical mountain forest in Southern Ecuador. The performance of several native species was evaluated for reforestation, including the effects of removal of competing herbaceous vegetation and seedlings pretreatment (e.g. fertilization, inoculation with arbuscular mycorrhiza fungi). The results showed an inhibited natural succession on the Pasture site which can be improved by planting well adapted species as A. acuminata. On the Bracken- and Shrub-sites the natural succession may be optimized by enrichment planting of M. pubescens and T. chrysantha.
Silva, B. & Bendix, J. (2012-07-26). Monitoring and modelling competing grassland species using very-high and high-resolution remote sensing in the Andes of Ecuador. Presented at IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium - IGARSS, Munich, Germany.
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A method is presented for monitoring and modeling...
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A method is presented for monitoring and modeling of two competing grassland species (the southern bracken fern and the pasture grass Setaria). The method consists of estimating leaf area index for each species by using field observations and measurements, very-high and high-resolution images. The higher level of information at very-high resolution is used for identification of homogenous cover, on which a single species predominates. Consequently, ground measurements are used with high-resolution data to calculate species-specific regression functions between the normalized difference vegetation index and leaf area index. These data are used in a simulation run to extend the knowledge on occurrence and competition of bracken fern and Setaria pasture in the southern Ecuador
Homeier, J.; Hertel, D.; Camenzind, T.; Cumbicus Torres, N.; Maraun, M.; Martinson, G.; Poma, N.; Rillig, M.C.; Sandmann, D.; Scheu, S.; Veldkamp, E.; Wilcke, W.; Wullaert, H. & Leuschner, C. (2012): Tropical Andean Forests Are Highly Susceptible to Nutrient Inputs - Rapid Effects of Experimental N and P Addition to an Ecuadorian Montane Forest. PLoS ONE 7, e47128
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0047128.
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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0047128.
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Bendix, J.; Paladines, B.; Ribadeneira Sarmiento, M.; Romero, L.M.; Valarezo, C. & Beck, E. (2010-01-25). Benefit sharing by research, education and knowledge transfer - a success story of biodiversity research in southern Ecuador. Presented at UNESCO IYB Biodiversity Science-Policy Conference, UNESCO Headquarters, Paris.
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Abstract:
The paper reports of the successful knowledge tra...
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The paper reports of the successful knowledge transfer of the DFG (German research foundation) research unit RU816/Ecuador in the context of the Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). It introduces the approach of the RU816 and its scientific education and capacity building. It further presents the shared access to research facilities, technology and information as well as the potentials of a transfer of basic research to application and the public education and awareness. The authors conclude with a description of the DFG and the ABS process.
Roos, K.; Hamer, U.; Potthast, K.; Tischer, A. & Beck, E. (2011-10-07). Ecología de los pastos y efectos de su manejo en los Andes en el Sur de Ecuador. Presented at Annual status symposium of the RU816, Loja, Ecuador.
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Beck, E. (2012-09-24). (Why) Do we need Legal Regulations for Biodiversity Research. Presented at 21st International Symposium "Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology" of the German Botanical Society, Mainz, Germany.
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