Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. 1 de abr. de 2020 · Tropical trees are not just key organisms for global climate, biodiversity, and carbon stock but also represent surviving ‘time capsules’ of cultural heritage. After the ice caps, tropical forests are globally the most threatened terrestrial environments.

    • Victor Lery Caetano-Andrade, Charles Roland Clement, Detlef Weigel, Susan E. Trumbore, Nicole Boivin...
    • 2020
  2. After the ice caps, tropical forests are globally the most threatened terrestrial environments. Modern trees are not just witnesses to growing contemporary threats but also legacies of past human activity. Here, we review the use of dendrochronology, radiocarbon analysis, stable isotope analysis, an ….

  3. the presence of a long-term, living record of human–environment interactions in tropical tree populations. Recent research involving stable isotope transects across tree cores has documented climate-related variations in growing conditions. Stable oxygen isotope (δ18O) analyses of tropical tree

  4. 1 de fev. de 2020 · Tropical Trees as Time Capsules of Anthropogenic Activity. February 2020. Trends in Plant Science 25 (4) DOI: 10.1016/j.tplants.2019.12.010. License. CC BY 4.0. Authors: Victor L...

  5. 6 de fev. de 2020 · Tropical Trees as Time Capsules of Anthropogenic Activity. Caetano-Andrade VL 1 , Clement CR 2 , Weigel D 3 , Trumbore S 4 , Boivin N 5 , Schöngart J 2 , Roberts P 5. Author information. Affiliations. 1. Department of Archaeology, Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History, Jena, Germany. (1 author) 2.

  6. Here, we review the use of dendrochronology, radiocarbon analysis, stable isotope analysis, and DNA analysis to examine ancient tree management. These methods exploit the fact that living trees record information on environmental and anthropogenic selective forces during their own and past generations of growth, making trees living ...

  7. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2021. TLDR. This Special Feature draws on multidisciplinary contributions from archaeology, history, paleoecology, climate science, and Indigenous traditional knowledge to explore the authors' species’ interaction with tropical forests across space and through time.