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Andreas Tribsch
Researcher at University of Salzburg
Publications - 69
Citations - 4436
Andreas Tribsch is an academic researcher from University of Salzburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Range (biology). The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 69 publications receiving 4160 citations. Previous affiliations of Andreas Tribsch include University of Oslo & American Museum of Natural History.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Molecular evidence for glacial refugia of mountain plants in the European Alps.
TL;DR: A comparison of the phylogeographic patterns with geological and palaeoenvironmental data demonstrates that glacial refugia were located along the southwestern, southern, eastern and northern border of the Alps, which implies that evolutionary or biogeographic processes induced by climatic fluctuations act on gene and species diversity in a similar way.
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Patterns of endemism and comparative phylogeography confirm palaeo- environmental evidence for Pleistocene refugia in the Eastern Alps
TL;DR: Test hypotheses on Pleistocene refugia for mountain plants in the eastern part of the European Alps derived from palaeoenvironmental and geological results are tested, with new data on distributional patterns of vascular plant endemics and molecular phylogeographies of selected species.
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Vicariance and dispersal in the alpine perennial Bupleurum stellatum L. (Apiaceae)
TL;DR: This study shows that deep phylogeographic splits resulting from old vicariance events can be concealed by presently contiguous distribution areas, and can be related to glacial refugia in peripheral areas of the Alps that were recognised in previous studies.
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History or ecology? Substrate type as a major driver of spatial genetic structure in Alpine plants
Nadir Alvarez,Conny Thiel-Egenter,Andreas Tribsch,Rolf Holderegger,Stéphanie Manel,Peter Schönswetter,Pierre Taberlet,Sabine Brodbeck,Myriam Gaudeul,Ludovic Gielly,Philippe Küpfer,Guilhem Mansion,Riccardo Negrini,Ovidiu Paun,Marco Pellecchia,Delphine Rioux,Fanny Schüpfer,Marcela van Loo,Manuela Winkler,Felix Gugerli +19 more
TL;DR: The relevance of particular ecological factors in shaping genetic patterns, which should be considered when modelling species projective distributions under climate change scenarios, are demonstrated.
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Several Pleistocene refugia detected in the high alpine plant Phyteuma globulariifolium Sternb. & Hoppe (Campanulaceae) in the European Alps
TL;DR: The authors' results favour glacial survival in peripheral, unglaciated or not fully glaciated areas of P. globulariifolium within the Alps, which suggests high levels of gene‐flow over short to middle distances.