Publicaciones en colaboración con investigadoras/es de Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (38)

2023

  1. Classification of European oak–hornbeam forests and related vegetation types

    Applied Vegetation Science, Vol. 26, Núm. 1

  2. Climate-trait relationships exhibit strong habitat specificity in plant communities across Europe

    Nature communications, Vol. 14, Núm. 1, pp. 712

  3. Disturbance indicator values for European plants

    Global Ecology and Biogeography, Vol. 32, Núm. 1, pp. 24-34

  4. Ellenberg-type indicator values for European vascular plant species

    Journal of Vegetation Science, Vol. 34, Núm. 1

2021

  1. Alien plant invasion hotspots and invasion debt in European woodlands

    Journal of Vegetation Science, Vol. 32, Núm. 2

  2. Benchmarking plant diversity of Palaearctic grasslands and other open habitats

    Journal of Vegetation Science, Vol. 32, Núm. 4

  3. Climate and socio-economic factors explain differences between observed and expected naturalization patterns of European plants around the world

    Global Ecology and Biogeography, Vol. 30, Núm. 7, pp. 1514-1531

  4. Different sets of traits explain abundance and distribution patterns of European plants at different spatial scales

    Journal of Vegetation Science, Vol. 32, Núm. 2

  5. Dimensions of invasiveness: Links between local abundance, geographic range size, and habitat breadth in Europe's alien and native floras

    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol. 118, Núm. 22

  6. Grasslands of Navarre (Spain), focusing on the Festuco-Brometea: classification, hierarchical expert system and characterisation

    Vegetation Classification and Survey, Vol. 2, pp. 195-231

  7. Mapping species richness of plant families in European vegetation

    Journal of Vegetation Science, Vol. 32, Núm. 3

  8. Plant functional and taxonomic diversity in european grasslands along climatic gradients

    Journal of Vegetation Science, Vol. 32, Núm. 3

  9. Plant taxonomic and phylogenetic turnover increases toward climatic extremes and depends on historical factors in European beech forests

    Journal of Vegetation Science, Vol. 32, Núm. 1

  10. Potential alien ranges of European plants will shrink in the future, but less so for already naturalized than for not yet naturalized species

    Diversity and Distributions, Vol. 27, Núm. 11, pp. 2063-2076