追蹤
Sarah Woodin
Sarah Woodin
未知關係機構
在 abdn.ac.uk 的電子郵件地址已通過驗證
標題
引用次數
引用次數
年份
Accelerated increase in plant species richness on mountain summits is linked to warming
MJ Steinbauer, JA Grytnes, G Jurasinski, A Kulonen, J Lenoir, H Pauli, ...
Nature 556 (7700), 231-234, 2018
8292018
Climate change in the Arctic: using plant functional types in a meta‐analysis of field experiments
CF Dormann, SJ Woodin
Functional Ecology 16 (1), 4-17, 2002
4292002
Arctic mosses govern below-ground environment and ecosystem processes
JL Gornall, IS Jónsdóttir, SJ Woodin, R Van der Wal
Oecologia 153, 931-941, 2007
3022007
Impacts of increased nitrogen supply on high Arctic heath: the importance of bryophytes and phosphorus availability
C Gordon, JM Wynn, SJ Woodin
New phytologist 149 (3), 461-471, 2001
2472001
THE POTENTIAL IMPORTANCE OF AN INCREASED ATMOSPHERIC NITROGEN SUPPLY TO THE GROWTH OF OMBROTROPHIC SPHAGNUM SPECIES
MC Press, SJ Woodin, JA Lee
New Phytologist 103 (1), 45-55, 1986
2331986
Physiological and growth responses of the montane bryophyte Racomitrium lanuginosum to atmospheric nitrogen deposition
ISK Pearce, SJ Woodin, R Van der Wal
New Phytologist 160 (1), 145-155, 2003
1552003
Interplay between nitrogen deposition and grazing causes habitat degradation
R Van Der Wal, I Pearce, R Brooker, D Scott, D Welch, S Woodin
Ecology Letters 6 (2), 141-146, 2003
1352003
Biotic homogenization of upland vegetation: patterns and drivers at multiple spatial scales over five decades
LC Ross, SJ Woodin, AJ Hester, DBA Thompson, HJB Birks
Journal of vegetation science 23 (4), 755-770, 2012
1322012
Effects of increased temperature, drought and nitrogen supply on two upland perennials of contrasting functional type: Calluna vulgaris and Pteridium aquilinum
C Gordon, SJ Woodin, IJ Alexander, CE Mullins
The New Phytologist 142 (2), 243-258, 1999
1231999
Root traits predict decomposition across a landscape‐scale grazing experiment
SW Smith, SJ Woodin, RJ Pakeman, D Johnson, R Van Der Wal
New Phytologist 203 (3), 851-862, 2014
1152014
Balancing positive and negative plant interactions: how mosses structure vascular plant communities
JL Gornall, SJ Woodin, IS Jónsdóttir, R van der Wal
Oecologia 166, 769-782, 2011
1142011
NITRATE REDUCTASE ACTIVITY IN SPHAGNUM FUSCUM IN RELATION TO WET DEPOSITION OF NITRATE FROM THE ATMOSPHERE
S Woodin, MC Press, JA Lee
New Phytologist 99 (3), 381-388, 1985
1121985
Spring feeding by pink‐footed geese reduces carbon stocks and sink strength in tundra ecosystems
R Van Der WAL, S Sjögersten, SJ Woodin, EJ Cooper, IS Jónsdóttir, ...
Global Change Biology 13 (2), 539-545, 2007
1082007
Effects of increased nitrogen and phosphorus availability on the photosynthesis and nutrient relations of three arctic dwarf shrubs from Svalbard
JA Baddeley, SJ Woodin, IJ Alexander
Functional Ecology, 676-685, 1994
1031994
Is there a cost of parasites to caribou?
J Hughes, SD Albon, RJ Irvine, S Woodin
Parasitology 136 (2), 253-265, 2009
1022009
Can the foliar nitrogen concentration of upland vegetation be used for predicting atmospheric nitrogen deposition? Evidence from field surveys
WK Hicks, ID Leith, SJ Woodin, D Fowler
Environmental Pollution 107 (3), 367-376, 2000
1012000
Effects of carbon dioxide and nitrogen enrichment on a plant–insect interaction: the quality of Calluna vulgaris as a host for Operophtera brumata
JE Kerslake, SJ Woodin, SE Hartley
The New Phytologist 140 (1), 43-53, 1998
961998
Herbivore impacts to the moss layer determine tundra ecosystem response to grazing and warming
JL Gornall, SJ Woodin, IS Jónsdóttir, R Van der Wal
Oecologia 161, 747-758, 2009
952009
Plant community properties predict vegetation resilience to herbivore disturbance in the Arctic
JDM Speed, EJ Cooper, IS Jónsdóttir, R Van Der Wal, SJ Woodin
Journal of Ecology 98 (5), 1002-1013, 2010
892010
HABITAT TYPE DETERMINES HERBIVORY CONTROLS OVER CO2 FLUXES IN A WARMER ARCTIC
S Sjögersten, R Van der Wal, SJ Woodin
Ecology 89 (8), 2103-2116, 2008
882008
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