Buchmann, N.; Bonal, D.; Barigah, T. S.; Guehl, J. M.; Ehleringer, J. R.: Insights into the carbon dynamics of tropical primary rainforests using stable carbon isotope analyses. In: Ecology and management of a neotropical rainforest: lessons drawn from Paracou, a long-term exeperimental research site in French Guiana, pp. 95 - 113 (Eds. Gourlet-Fleury, S.; Guehl, J. M.; Laroussinie, O.). Elsevier, Paris (2004)
Janssens, I. A.; Dore, S.; Epron, D.; Lankreijer, H.; Buchmann, N.; Longdoz, B.; Brossaud, J.; Montagnani, L.: Climatic influences on seasonal and spatial differences in soil CO" efflux. In: Fluxes of Carbon, Water and Energy of European Forests, Vol. 163, pp. 233 - 253 (Ed. Valentini, R.). Springer, Heidelberg (2003)
Lankreijer, H.; Janssens, I. A.; Buchmann, N.; Longdoz, B.; Epron, D.; Dore, S.: Measurement of soil respiration. In: Fluxes of Carbon, Water and Energy of European Forests, Vol. 163, pp. 37 - 54 (Ed. Valentini, R.). Springer, Heidelberg (2003)
Hooper, D.; Buchmann, N.; Degrange, V.; Díaz, S. M.; Gessner, M. O.; Grime, P.; Hulot, F.; Mermillod-Blondin, F.; Van Peer, L.; Roy, J.et al.; Symstad, A.; Solan, M.; Spehn, E.: Species diversity, functional diversity and ecosystem functioning. In: Biodiversity and ecosystems functioning: a current synthesis, pp. 195 - 208 (Eds. Loreau, M.; Naeem, S.; Inchausti, P.). Oxford University Press, Oxford (2002)
Krause, R.; Buchmann, N.; Churkina, G.; Freibauer, A.: Development of a database for climate research. In: Environmental communication in the information society: proceedings of the 16th International Conference Informatics for Environmental Protection, September 25 - 27, 2002, University of Technology, Vienna, Austria, Vol. 2, pp. 643 - 646 (Eds. Pillmann, W.; Tochtermann, K.). International Society for Envirnonmental Protection, Vienna, Austria (2002)
Wichura, B.; Buchmann, N.; Foken, T.: Carbon dioxide exchange characteristics above a spruce forest. In: 25th Conference on Agricultural and Forest Meteorology: 20 - 24 May 2002, Norfolk, Virginia, pp. 63 - 64. American Meteorological Society, Boston (2002)
Buchmann, N.; Kaplan, J. O.: Carbon isotope discrimination of terrestrial ecosystems - how well do observed and modeled results match? In: Global biogeochemical cycles in the climate system, pp. 253 - 266 (Eds. Schulze, E.-D.; Heimann, M.; Harrison, S. P.; Holland, E.; Lloyd, J. et al.). Academic Press, San Diego (2001)
Gebauer, G.; Zeller, B.; Schmidt, G.; May, C.; Buchmann, N.; Colin-Belgrand, M.; Dambrine, E.; Martin, F.; Schulze, E.-D.; Bottner, P.: The fate of N-15-labelled nitrogen inputs to coniferous and broadleaf forests. In: Carbon and Nitrogen Cycling in European Forest Ecosystems, Vol. 142, pp. 144 - 170 (2000)
Matteucci, G.; Dore, S.; Stivanello, S.; Rebmann, C.; Buchmann, N.: Soil respiration in beech and spruce forests in Europe: Trends, controlling factors, annual budgets and implications for the ecosystem carbon balance. In: Carbon and Nitrogen Cycling in European Forest Ecosystems, Vol. 142, pp. 217 - 236 (Ed. Schulze, E.-D.). Springer, Berlin (2000)
Wichura, B.; Buchmann, N.; Foken, T.: Fluxes of the stable carbon isotope 13C above a spruce forest measured by hyperbolic relaxed eddy accumulation method. In: 14th Symposium on Boundary Layers and Turbulence. 14th Symposium on Boundary Layers and Turbulence, Boston. (2000)
The BIOMASS satellite was successfully launched into orbit on 29 April 2025. The BIOMASS mission is designed to map and monitor global forests. It will map the structure of different forest types and provide data on above-ground biomass.
More frequent strong storms are destroying ever larger areas of the Amazon rainforest. Storm damage was mapped between 1985 and 2020. The total area of affected forests roughly quadrupled in the period studied.
Recently, representatives of the Brazilian Ministry of Research and foreign ambassadors visited the German-Brazilian research station ATTO. On site, Research Minister Pontes promised multi-million investments in Amazon research and also in ATTO. This is intended to further expand the infrastructure and strengthen research in Brazil.
For the German-Brazilian joint project ATTO (Amazon Tall Tower Observatory), the Max Planck Society on the German side will continue to ensure the continued operation of the research station in the Brazilian rainforest and research. In addition, the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) will fund the project with ATTO+ for another three years with around 5 million euros.