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O armário: Fruiting phenology data for 4,462 plant taxa in Portugal (1926-2013)

Heleno, Ruben; Costa, Jose M.; Covelo, Filipe Manuel Ferreira Rodrigues; Santos, Joaquim; Lopes, Pedro; Gouveia, António C; Matos, Arménio

Species phenology - the timing of key life events - is being altered by ongoing climate changes with yet underappreciated consequences for ecosystem stability. While flowering is generally occurring earlier, we know much less about other key processes such as the time of fruit ripening, largely due to the lack of comprehensive long-term datasets. Here we provide information on the exact date and site where seed...


EuDiS - A comprehensive database of the seed dispersal syndromes of the Europea...

Vargas, Pablo; Heleno, Ruben; Costa, Jose M.

Seed dispersal is a critical process in plant colonisation and demography. Fruits and seeds can be transported by several vectors (typically animals, wind and water), which may have exerted strong selective pressures on plant's morphological traits. The set of traits that favour dispersal by a specific vector have been historically considered as seed dispersal syndromes. As seed dispersal syndromes have a great...


Tripartite networks show that keystone species can multitask

Timóteo, Sérgio; Albrecht, Jörg; Rumeu, Beatriz; Norte, Ana C.; Traveset, Anna; Frost, Carol M.; Marchante, Elizabete; López-Núñez, Francisco A.

1. Keystone species are disproportionately important for ecosystem functioning. While all species engage in multiple interaction types with other species, keystone species importance is often defined based on a single dimension of their Eltonian niche, that is, one type of interaction (e.g. keystone predator). It remains unclear whether the importance of keystone species is unidimensional or if it extends acros...


Species temporal persistence promotes the stability of fruit–frugivore interact...

Costa, Jose M.; Ramos, Jaime; Timóteo, Sérgio; Silva, Luís P.; Ceia, Ricardo S.; Heleno, Ruben H.


Natural woodlands hold more diverse, abundant, and unique biota than novel anth...

Silva, Luís P. da; Heleno, Ruben H.; Costa, Jose M.; Valente, Mariana Morais; Mata, Vanessa A.; Gonçalves, Susana C.; Silva, António Alves da


Pollination networks from natural and anthropogenic-novel communities show high...

Timóteo, Sérgio; O'Connor, Catherine J; López-Núñez, Francisco A.; Costa, Jose M.; Gouveia, António C; Heleno, Ruben H

The Anthropocene is marked by an unprecedented homogenisation of the world's biota, confronting species that never co-occurred during their evolutionary histories. Interactions established in these novel communities may affect ecosystem functioning; however, most research has focused on the impacts of a minority of aggressive invasive species, while changes inflicted by a less conspicuous majority of non-invasi...


Rewiring of experimentally disturbed seed dispersal networks might lead to unex...

Costa, Jose M.; Ramos, Jaime; Silva, Luís P. da; Timóteo, Sérgio; Andrade, Pedro; Araújo, Pedro M.; Carneiro, Camilo; Correia, Edna; Cortez, Paulo


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