All Stories

  1. Designing an ecologically representative global network of protected areas requires coordination between countries
  2. Do natural enemies mediate conspecific negative distance‐ and density‐dependence of trees? A meta‐analysis of exclusion experiments
  3. Species diversity, morphometrics, and nesting biology of Chinese stingless bees (Hymenoptera, Apidae, Meliponini)
  4. Characteristics of the complete chloroplast genome sequences of Stylidium debile and Stylidium petiolare (Stylidiaceae)
  5. Taxonomic notes on the genus Dumasia (Fabaceae)
  6. The return of the elephants: How two groups of dispersing elephants attracted the attention of billions and what can we learn from their behavior
  7. Are Terrestrial Biological Invasions Different in the Tropics?
  8. Plastid NDH Pseudogenization and Gene Loss in a Recently Derived Lineage from the Largest Hemiparasitic Plant Genus Pedicularis (Orobanchaceae)
  9. Corrigendum to “Identifying the mechanisms that shape fungal community and metacommunity patterns in Yunnan, China” [Fungal Ecol. 42 (2019) 100862]
  10. Conservation planning on China's borders with Myanmar, Laos, and Vietnam
  11. How will climate change affect the wild species in Thailand's protected areas?
  12. Advice to foreign researchers working in the tropics.
  13. A multistakeholder exercise to identify research and conservation priorities for Asian elephants in China
  14. What is China doing in biodiversity science?
  15. Plant-Animal Interactions
  16. How does seed predation change with altitude in the tropics?
  17. Potential for application of biochar in rubber plantations
  18. Conservation Biology: Finding Space for Both Crops and Nature
  19. Projected Impacts of Climate Change on the Protected Areas of Myanmar
  20. Ensuring tests of conservation interventions build on existing literature
  21. Contributions to the flora of Myanmar from 2000 to 2019
  22. Climate change promotes transitions to tall evergreen vegetation in tropical Asia
  23. Impacts of the coronavirus pandemic on biodiversity conservation
  24. Drivers of bird beta diversity in the Western Ghats–Sri Lanka biodiversity hotspot are scale dependent: roles of land use, climate, and distance
  25. What is biodiversity, why do we need it, and how can we protect it?
  26. Combining camera‐trap surveys and hunter interviews to determine the status of mammals in protected rainforests and rubber plantations of Menglun, Xishuangbanna, SW China
  27. Applications of environmental DNA (eDNA) in ecology and conservation: opportunities, challenges and prospects
  28. How much area do we need to protect to reduce extinction risk under climate change?
  29. Reasons for the Survival of Tropical Forest Fragments in Xishuangbanna, Southwest China
  30. Chemical Composition and the Cytotoxic, Antimicrobial, and Anti-Inflammatory Activities of the Fruit Peel Essential Oil from Spondias pinnata (Anacardiaceae) in Xishuangbanna, Southwest China
  31. The evolution of the hollies.
  32. Present-day drivers do not explain biodiversity patterns in mammals
  33. Climate Change and Edaphic Specialists: Irresistible Force Meets Immovable Object?
  34. Decoding the evolution and transmissions of the novel pneumonia coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2 / HCoV-19) using whole genomic data
  35. Amplicon sequencing dataset of soil fungi and associated environmental variables collected in karst and non-karst sites across Yunnan province, southwest China
  36. Identifying the mechanisms that shape fungal community and metacommunity patterns in Yunnan, China
  37. How many plant species are globally rare?
  38. Exceptionally high rates of positive selection on the rbcL gene in the genus Ilex (Aquifoliaceae)
  39. Plastid phylogenomics improve phylogenetic resolution in the Lauraceae
  40. How will the decline in rubber price since 2012 affect biodiversity in Southwest China?
  41. The distribution of plants and seed dispersers in response to habitat fragmentation in an artificial island archipelago
  42. How does habitat fragmentation affect biodiversity? A controversial question at the core of conservation biology
  43. The Xishuangbanna Declaration on Plant Conservation
  44. Fifty years of biological conservation
  45. The Xishuangbanna Declaration on Plant Conservation
  46. Vertical gradient in bryophyte diversity and species composition in tropical and subtropical forests in Yunnan, SW China
  47. The floral transcriptome of Machilus yunnanensis, a tree in the magnoliid family Lauraceae
  48. Prolonged milk provisioning in a jumping spider
  49. Spatial scale changes the relationship between beta diversity, species richness and latitude
  50. Trees represent community composition of other plant life-forms, but not their diversity, abundance or responses to fragmentation
  51. Seasonal changes in the diversity and composition of the litter fauna in native forests and rubber plantations
  52. Road induced edge effects on a forest bird community in tropical Asia
  53. Environmental challenges for the Belt and Road Initiative
  54. The cover uncovered: Bark control over wood decomposition
  55. The biological, ecological and conservation significance of freshwater swamp forest in Singapore
  56. Latitudinal effects on phenology near the northern limit of figs in China
  57. Biodiversity gains? The debate on changes in local- vs global-scale species richness
  58. The Hemiparasitic Plant Phtheirospermum (Orobanchaceae) Is Polyphyletic and Contains Cryptic Species in the Hengduan Mountains of Southwest China
  59. Tropical Rainforests and Climate Change
  60. Ecosystem services in China and Southeast Asia.
  61. Complete plastid genome sequences of three tropical Alseodaphne trees in the family Lauraceae
  62. Comparative analysis of complete chloroplast genome sequences of two subtropical trees, Phoebe sheareri and Phoebe omeiensis (Lauraceae)
  63. Evolutionary Comparisons of the Chloroplast Genome in Lauraceae and Insights into Loss Events in the Magnoliids
  64. Alien plant invasions of protected areas in Java, Indonesia
  65. What animal eats which fruits in the Asian tropics.
  66. China's biodiversity conservation research in progress
  67. Horizontal and vertical species turnover in tropical birds in habitats with differing land use
  68. Scatter-hoarding rodents select different caching habitats for seeds with different traits
  69. Editorial
  70. Conserving the World's Megafauna and Biodiversity: The Fierce Urgency of Now
  71. A Bigger Toolbox: Biotechnology in Biodiversity Conservation
  72. The complete chloroplast genome sequence ofHelwingia himalaica(Helwingiaceae, Aquifoliales) and a chloroplast phylogenomic analysis of the Campanulidae
  73. The broad footprint of climate change from genes to biomes to people
  74. Complete chloroplast genome sequence of the avocado: gene organization, comparative analysis, and phylogenetic relationships with other Lauraceae
  75. Field work ethics in biological research
  76. Behavior of four species of honeybees in southwest China
  77. Functional trait changes in the floras of 11 cities across the globe in response to urbanization
  78. The Role of Rewilding in Landscape Design for Conservation
  79. Saving the World's Terrestrial Megafauna
  80. Chloroplast genome structure in Ilex (Aquifoliaceae)
  81. The Impacts of Droughts in Tropical Forests
  82. Restoration, Reintroduction, and Rewilding in a Changing World
  83. Increasing geographic diversity in the international conservation literature: A stalled process?
  84. Humid Tropical Environments
  85. The utility of DNA metabarcoding for studying the response of arthropod diversity and composition to land-use change in the tropics
  86. A Regional Decision Support Scheme for Pest Risk Analysis in Southeast Asia
  87. Effects of forests, roads and mistletoe on bird diversity in monoculture rubber plantations
  88. Plant diversity in a changing world: Status, trends, and conservation needs
  89. Applied Ecology of Tropical Forests
  90. Classifying Tropical Forests
  91. Ecological Roles of Animals in Tropical Forests
  92. Tropical Forest Ecology in the Anthropocene
  93. Tropical Forest Ecosystem Ecology: Water, Energy, Carbon, and Nutrients
  94. Frugivory and Seed Dispersal by Large Herbivores of Asia
  95. Erratum to: Habitat fragmentation and biodiversity conservation: key findings and future challenges
  96. Habitat fragmentation and biodiversity conservation: key findings and future challenges
  97. Winter cropping in Ficus tinctoria: an alternative strategy
  98. Routledge Handbook of Forest Ecology
  99. Orchid conservation in the biodiversity hotspot of southwestern China
  100. Post-dispersal seed removal by ground-feeding rodents in tropical peatlands, Central Kalimantan, Indonesia
  101. Comparative analysis of complete chloroplast genome sequences of two tropical trees Machilus yunnanensis and Machilus balansae in the family Lauraceae
  102. Global Ecology and Conservation
  103. Winners and losers among tree species in Xishuangbanna: which traits are most important?
  104. Assessing species vulnerability to climate change
  105. The Anthropocene concept in ecology and conservation
  106. The use of species-area relationships to partition the effects of hunting and deforestation on bird extirpations in a fragmented landscape
  107. Rewilding the tropics, and other conservation translocations strategies in the tropical Asia‐Pacific region
  108. The Ecology of Tropical East Asia
  109. Energy and nutrients
  110. The ecology of animals: foods and feeding
  111. Minimizing Risks of Invasive Alien Plant Species in Tropical Production Forest Management
  112. Global Ecology and Conservation
  113. Natural regeneration in a degraded tropical peatland, Central Kalimantan, Indonesia: Implications for forest restoration
  114. Factors influencing repeated seed movements by scatter-hoarding rodents in an alpine forest
  115. New approaches to novel ecosystems
  116. Tropical Forest Ecology in the Anthropocene
  117. How to classify tropical forests
  118. Tropical Forest Ecosystem Ecology: Water, Energy, Carbon, and Nutrients
  119. What do animals do in tropical forests and why do the forests need them?
  120. Applied Ecology of Tropical Forests
  121. Becoming Europe: Southeast Asia in the Anthropocene
  122. A short note on seed dispersal by colobines: the case of the proboscis monkey
  123. Seed rain into a degraded tropical peatland in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia
  124. Economic and Environmental Impacts of Harmful Non-Indigenous Species in Southeast Asia
  125. Leaf litter depth as an important factor inhibiting seedling establishment of an exotic palm in tropical secondary forest patches
  126. Will plant movements keep up with climate change?
  127. Singapore
  128. The shifted baseline: Prehistoric defaunation in the tropics and its consequences for biodiversity conservation
  129. Possible role of weaver ants,Oecophylla smaragdina, in shaping plant-pollinator interactions in South-East Asia
  130. Climate warming and the potential extinction of fig wasps, the obligate pollinators of figs
  131. Where are the Subtropics?
  132. Flowers attract weaver ants that deter less effective pollinators
  133. Averting biodiversity collapse in tropical forest protected areas
  134. Climate change in the tropics: The end of the world as we know it?
  135. Herbarium records do not predict rediscovery of presumed nationally extinct species
  136. Seed dispersal in changing landscapes
  137. How to be a frugivore (in a changing world)
  138. Impacts of warming on tropical lowland rainforests
  139. Seed dispersal in Hong Kong, China: past, present and possible futures
  140. Asian Tapirs Are No Elephants When It Comes To Seed Dispersal
  141. Scavenging of dead invertebrates along an urbanisation gradient in Singapore
  142. Tropical Rain Forests
  143. Plant traits and extinction in urban areas: a meta-analysis of 11 cities
  144. Biodiversity and Conservation of Tropical Peat Swamp Forests
  145. The Importance of Animals in the Forest
  146. Towards a global database of weed risk assessments: a test of transferability for the tropics
  147. Honeybees in Natural Ecosystems
  148. Trouble with the Gray Literature
  149. Altered Ecologies (Terra Australis 32): Fire, climate and human influence on terrestrial landscapes
  150. Assessing avian habitat fragmentation in urban areas of Hong Kong (Kowloon) at high spatial resolution using spectral unmixing
  151. Equatorial Cities as Novel Ecosystems
  152. A global synthesis of plant extinction rates in urban areas
  153. Seed consumption by small mammals from Borneo
  154. Invasive aliens on tropical East Asian islands
  155. Seed Dispersal Distances and Plant Migration Potential in Tropical East Asia
  156. A conceptual framework for predicting the effects of urban environments on floras
  157. Frugivory and seed dispersal by vertebrates in the Oriental (Indomalayan) Region
  158. Exotic plant invasion in the highly degraded upland landscape of Hong Kong, China
  159. Seasonality of a forest bird community in Hong Kong, South China
  160. Seed rain and natural regeneration in Lophostemon confertus plantations in Hong Kong, China
  161. Correlates of extinction proneness in tropical angiosperms
  162. The Plight of Large Animals in Tropical Forests and the Consequences for Plant Regeneration
  163. The Impact of Hunting on the Mammalian Fauna of Tropical Asian Forests
  164. Effect of ingestion by two frugivorous bat species on the seed germination of Ficus racemosa and F. hispida (Moraceae)
  165. Management of plant invasions mediated by frugivore interactions
  166. Rodent Diversity in a Highly Degraded Tropical Landscape: Hong Kong, South China
  167. How far do birds disperse seeds in the degraded tropical landscape of Hong Kong, China?
  168. Seed rain into upland plant communities in Hong Kong, China
  169. Tropical rainforests and the need for cross-continental comparisons
  170. Selecting small reserves in a human-dominated landscape: A case study of Hong Kong, China
  171. Interactions between birds, fruit bats and exotic plants in urban Hong Kong, South China
  172. Reproductive biology of theIlexspecies (Aquifoliaceae) in Hong Kong, China
  173. Figs (Ficus, Moraceae) in Urban Hong Kong, South China1
  174. Natural regeneration in exotic tree plantations in Hong Kong, China
  175. Beyond Singapore: Hong Kong and Asian biodiversity
  176. The persistence of ripe fleshy fruits in the presence and absence of frugivores
  177. Flower visitors and pollination in the Oriental (Indomalayan) Region
  178. A fine-scale gap analysis of the existing protected area system in Hong Kong, China
  179. Invasive birds in Hong Kong, China
  180. Factors Affecting the Early Survival and Growth of Native Tree Seedlings Planted on a Degraded Hillside Grassland in Hong Kong, China
  181. Phytogeography of Hong Kong bryophytes
  182. Continental rain forest fragments in Singapore resist invasion by exotic plants
  183. Seasonality of forest invertebrates in Hong Kong, South China
  184. Pollination in a degraded tropical landscape: a Hong Kong case study
  185. Genetic variation and structure in six Rhododendron species (Ericaceae) with contrasting local distribution patterns in Hong Kong, China
  186. The bird communities of a natural secondary forest and a Lophostemon confertus plantation in Hong Kong, South China
  187. Environmental forestry in Hong Kong: 1871–1997
  188. The biological sustainability of biomass harvesting
  189. Sugar composition of wild fruits in Hong Kong, China
  190. Effects of harvesting on the biomass of plant species
  191. Seed dispersal by long-tailed macaques
  192. EccremidiumWils., a moss genus new to China from Hong Kong
  193. Energy and nutrient flow through the storage and consumption of upland phytomass fuel
  194. Tropical forest fragments are worth preserving.
  195. A Study of Plant Species Extinction in Singapore: Lessons for the Conservation of Tropical Biodiversity
  196. What is secondary forest?
  197. Reproductive phenology of Hong Kong shrubland
  198. The Naturalized Flora of Hong Kong: A Comparison with Singapore
  199. The Ecological Transformation of Singapore, 1819-1990
  200. Alternative seed-handling strategies in primates: seed-spitting by long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis)
  201. The Naturalized Flora of Singapore
  202. Bukit Timah: the History and Significance of a Small Rain-forest Reserve
  203. Seed Germination in Hedyotis Species (Rubiaceae)
  204. The Phenology of Ficus fistulosa in Singapore
  205. Post-Fire Succession on Mt. Wilhelm, Papua New Guinea
  206. The mangrove understory: some additional observations
  207. Sexual dimorphism of tooth size in anthropoids
  208. Plio-pleistocene hominid diets: an approach combining masticatory and ecological analysis
  209. PALYNOLOGICAL EVIDENCE FOR CHANGING SUBSISTENCE PATTERNS AROUND MT WILHELM, PAPUA NEW GUINEA
  210. Are the Xeromorphic Trees of Tropical Upper Montane Rain Forests Drought- Resistant?
  211. Dietary analysis II: food chemistry
  212. Asia