Ecophysiological investigations in the Negev Desert. III. The diurnal course of carbon dioxide exchange and transpiration and its balance in regard to primary production. Leningrad Symp., Leningrad, 1972. NAUKA (1972), 66-70 S.
Ecophysiological investigations in the Negev-Desert. I. The relationship between transpiration and net photosynthesis measured with a mobile field laboratory. Leningrad Symp., Leningrad, 1972. NAUKA (1972), 57-62 S.
Eco-phyisological investigations in the Negev Desert. II. The stomatal response to air humidity as a factor influencing plant productivity. Leningrad Symp., Leningrad, 1972. NAUKA (1972), 62-66 S.
Huston, M. A.; Ellison, A. M.; Frank, D.; Jackson, S. T.; Jiang, X.; Lau, M.; Lockwood, J. A.; Prager, S. D.; Reiners, D. S.; Reiners, W. A.et al.; Schulze, E. D.; Vandermeer, J. H.; Werner, P. A.: External influences on ecological theory: report on organized oral session 80 at the 100th anniversary meeting of the Ecological Society of America. Bulletin of the Ecological Society of America 97 (3), S. 311 - 317 (2016)
Lapshina, E.; Schulze, E. D.; Filippov, I. V.; Kuhlmann, I.: The downward movement of dissolved organic carbon exists in the boreal petlands of West Siberia. In: Proceedings of the Fourth International Field Symposium, Novosibirsk. Section 2. Carbon Cycle in Mire Ecosystems, S. 145 - 147. (2014)
Schulze, E.-D.; Dolman, A.; Vaganov, E.; Verkhovets, S.; Zander, E.; Pyzhev, A.: The carbon balance of Central Siberia and the role of the hydrobiogeochemistry of the big Siberian rivers in the carbon cycle. In: Resource economics, Environmental economics and Climate change - 2011, S. 222 - 231. Resource Economics, Environmental Economics and Climate Change-2011, 2011, 04. Juli 2011 - 09. Juli 2011. Siberian Federal University, Krasnojarsk (2011)
Schulze, E. D.: Erhalt der biologischen Vielfalt im Zeichen des Klimawandels. In: Weltnaturerbe Buchenwälder, Europäische Konferenz am 12./13. Juni 2009, S. 65 - 66 (Hg. Schrader, R.). (2009)
Freibauer, A.; Schulze, E. D.: Effizienz von Kohlenstoffsenken unter dem Aspekt des Klimaschutzes. In: Fachtagung "Auf Holzwegen in die Zukunft - eine Option für den Klimaschutz". Fachtagung "Auf Holzwegen in die Zukunft - eine Option für den Klimaschutz", Kloster Nimbschen, June 22-23, 2004. (2004)
Wirth, C.; Schulze, E.-D.; Lloyd, J.; Kelliher, F. M.; Rebmann, C.; Lühker, B.; Vygodskaya, N. N.; Schulze, W.; Ziegler, W.; Milukova, I.et al.; Valentini, R.; Sogachev, A.; Varlagin, A.; Panfyorov, M.; Grigoriev, S.; Kusnetzova, W.; Zimmermann, R.: Productivity and carbon sink capacity of russian boreal forests. In: Ecological and economic problems in the boreal woodlands of Russia, S. 66 - 71. Ecological and economic problems in the boreal woodlands of Russia, Tharandt, Germany. (1998)
Bruckner, G.; Schulze, E. D.; Gebauer, G.: 15N labelled NH3 uptake experiments and their relation to natural conditions (Air Pollution Research Report 47). In: Air pollution research report; Joint workshop CEC/BIATEX of EUROTRAC, Bd. 47, S. 305 - 311 (Hg. Slanina, J.). General assessment of biogenic emissions and deposition of nitrogen compounds, sulphur compounds and oxidants in Europe : Joint Workshop CEC/BIATEX of EUROTRAC, Aveiro, Portugal, 04. Mai 1993 - 07. Mai 1993. Reidel, Dordrecht (1993)
Gebauer, G.; Schulze, E. D.: Natürliche C- und N-Isotopenverhältnisse in verschiedenen Kompartimenten gesunder und geschädigter Fichtenbestände. In: 2. Statusseminar der PBWU zum Forschungsschwerpunkt "Waldschäden", GSF-Bericht, Bd. 26, S. 283 - 300 (Hg. Reuther, M.). (1991)
Schulze, E. D.; Ulrich, B.: Acid Rain - A large-scale, unwanted eperiment in forest ecosystems. In: Ecosystems Experiments; published on behalf of the Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) of the International Council of Scientific Unions (ICSU), Bd. 45, S. 89 - 106 (Hg. Mooney, H. A.; Medina, E.; et al.). John Wiley & Sons Ltd, Chichester [u.a.] (1991)
Schulze, E. D.: Überlegungen für eine zukünftige Waldschadensforschung. In: 1. Statusseminar der PBWU zum Forschungsschwerpunkt "Waldschäden", GSF-Bericht 6/89, Bd. 6, S. 497 - 506. 1. Statusseminar der PBWU zum Forschungsschwerpunkt "Waldschäden", Neuherberg, 27. Februar 1989 - 01. März 1989. (1989)
Schulze, E. D.: Die Wirkung von Immissionen auf Fichtenökosysteme - Ergebnisse der Waldschadensforschung im Fichtelgebirge. In: 1. Statusseminar der PBWU zum Forschungsschwerpunkt "Waldschäden", GSF-Bericht 6/89, S. 95 - 106. 1. Statusseminar der PBWU zum Forschungsschwerpunkt "Waldschäden", GSF-Bericht 6/89, 1989. (1989)
Schulze, E. D.; Gebauer, G.: Aufnahme, Abgabe und Umsatz von Stickoxiden, NH4+ und Nitrat bei Waldbäumen, insbesondere der Fichte. In: 1. Statusseminar der PBWU zum Forschungsschwerpunkt "Waldschäden", GSF Bericht 6/89, S. 119 - 133. 1. Statusseminar der PBWU zum Forschungsschwerpunkt "Waldschäden", GSF Bericht, 1989. (1989)
Evenari, M.; Schulze, E. D.; Kappen, L.; Buschbom, U.; Lange, O. L.: Adaptive mechanisms in desert plants. In: Physiological adaptation in the environment: Proceedings of a symposium held at the 1973 Meeting of the American Institute of Biological Sciences, S. 111 - 129 (Hg. Vernberg, F. J.). Intext Educational Publishers, New York (1975)
Spellmann, H.; Schulze, E. D.: Waldnaturschutz im Hessischen Staatswald: Positionsbestimmung und Stellungnahme mit Bezug zu der 2022 in Kraft getretenen neuen Naturschutzleitlinie für den Hessischen Staatswald. (2023)
Depledge, M. H.; Bartonova, A.; Bastioli, C.; Bizek, V.; Brunner, P. H.; Burke, L.; Cassar, M.; Cramer, W.; Frankl, P.; Hukkinen, J.et al.; Karlsson, M.; Kundzewicz, Z. W.; Linnerooth-Bayer, J.; Nilsson, K.; Schulze, E. D.; Tsipouri, L. J.; Tubiana, L.; van Ypersele, J.-P.: Environmental research to support the EU 2020 Vision. (2011)
Zur COP27 in Ägypten reisten auch neun Max-Planck-Wissenschaftlerinnen und -Wissenschaftler, unter Ihnen Dr. Carlos Sierra, Gruppenleiter am Max-Planck-Institut für Biogeochemie in Jena. Im Interview vermittelt Tom Sparks Eindrücke und Einschätzungen zur Rolle der Wissenschaft.
A new study shows that future ecosystem functioning will increasingly depend on water availability. Using recent simulations from climate models, an international team of scientists found several “hot spot regions” where increasing water limitation strongly affects ecosystems. These include Central Europe, the Amazon, and western Russia.
Microorganisms in aquifers deep below the earth’s surface produce similar amounts of biomass as those in some marine waters. This is the finding of researchers led by the Friedrich Schiller University Jena and the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv). The study has been published in Nature Geoscience.
You can't see them with the naked eye, but our forest ground is littered with microorganisms. They decompose falling leaves, thereby improving soil quality and counteracting climate change. But how do these single-celled organisms coordinate their tasks? An international research team has been looking into this little-understood process. The results of the study were recently published in Scientific Reports.
International researchers found a pattern of extreme climate conditions leading to forest dieback. To do this, the team had collected worldwide records of climate-related tree and forest dieback events over the past nearly five decades. The results, recently published in Nature Communications, reveal an ominous scenario for forests in the context of ongoing global warming.
Precisely how does a forest system and the individual plants within it react to extreme drought? Understanding the processes involved is crucial to making forests more resilient in the increasingly dry climate that will result from climate change, and also important for refining climate models. A research team led by Prof. Dr. Christiane Werner from the University of Freiburg has conducted the most extensive experiment to date into this subject using stable isotopes to trace flows of water and carbon through a forest.
Ecosystems provide multiple services for humans. However, these services depend on basic ecosystem functions which are shaped by natural conditions like climate and species composition, and human interventions. A large international research team, led by the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, Jena, identified three key indicators that together summarize the integrative function of terrestrial ecosystems.
The efficiency of plants to use water and take up carbon dioxide for growth critically depends on the availability of nitrogen, phosphorus and their balance in the ecosystem. In a recent study, researchers of the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry and their Spanish partners analyzed how plants and their environment respond to the addition of these nutrients.
Wissenschaftler*innen schlagen eine alternative Strategie zur Kontrolle der Treibhausgase und des globalen Klimasystems vor, die Konzepte aus der Regelungstheorie, insbesondere die Regelung durch geschlossene Kreisläufe, aufgreift. Sie zeigen damit, wie die Zunahme von Kohlendioxid in der Atmosphäre als ein Problem der Staukontrolle behandelt werden kann.
The Global Carbon Project is a large international research project and part of the Future Earth initiative on global sustainability. It strives to develop a comprehensive picture of the global carbon cycle, making available up-to-date estimations of global CO2 emissions and sinks as well as information on the state of the climate system.
On the menu for slugs are not only mosses, lichens and garden vegetables, but also miniscule oribatid mites, which they unavoidably take in with their food. Astonishingly, most of these tiny arachnids survive the voyage through the slug's digestive system without harm and are excreted, alive, elsewhere in the ecosystem. Scientists led by Dr Manfred…
In April 2018 Susan Trumbore received the Benjamin Franklin Medal for her groundbreaking use of radiocarbon measurements in forests and soils to assess the carbon flux between the biosphere and the atmosphere. Her research thus makes an important contribution to understanding climate change.