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Andy Hector
Researcher at University of Oxford
Publications - 198
Citations - 42547
Andy Hector is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biodiversity & Species richness. The author has an hindex of 74, co-authored 183 publications receiving 36456 citations. Previous affiliations of Andy Hector include University of Zurich & Natural Environment Research Council.
Papers
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Challenges for biodiversity research in Europe
L. De Meester,P. van Tienderen,Marinus Werger,Andy Hector,Gert Wörheide,Jari Niemelä,Alex Aguilar,Erik Smets,Charles Godfray,William J. Sutherland,Jürgen Bauhus,Franck Courchamp,Gustavo Gandini,Marcus A. Koch,Y. Le Maho,Michaël Manuel,Jan Pawlowski,Eric Quéinnec,Ian P. F. Owens +18 more
TL;DR: The League of European Research Universities (LERU) argues for a focus on biodiversity research to feed new policies and targets as discussed by the authors, which is supported by the World Wide Web and the Internet.
Book ChapterDOI
Large-scale biodiversity experiments
Andy Hector,Michel Loreau +1 more
TL;DR: Biodiversity experiments are designed to identify how ecosystem functioning is affected by changes in diversity that can occur due to the decline, extinction, or invasion of species.
Journal ArticleDOI
Does restoring native forest restore ecosystem functioning? Evidence from a large-scale reforestation project in the Scottish Highlands
Emily Warner,Owen T. Lewis,Nick Brown,Rowan Green,Rowan Green,Alan McDonnell,Doug Gilbert,Andy Hector +7 more
Community assembly during secondary forest in a Chinese subtropical forest
Helge Bruelheide,Martin Böhnke,Sabine Both,Teng Fang,Thorsten Assmann,Martin Baruffol,Jürgen Bauhus,François Buscot,Xiao-Yong Chen,Bing-Yang Ding,Walter Durka,Alexandra Erfmeier,Markus Fischer,Christian GeiBler,Dali Guo,Liang-Dong Guo,Werner Härdtle,Jin-Sheng He,Andy Hector,Wenzel Kröber,Peter Kuhn,Anne C. Lang,Karin Nadrowski,Kequan Pei,Michael Scherer-Lorenzen,Xuezheng Shi,Thomas Scholten,Andreas Schuldt,Stefan Trogisch,Goddert von Oheimb,Erik Welk,Christian Wirth,Yu Ting Wu,Xuefei Yang,Xueqin Zeng,Shouren Zhang,Hong-Zhang Zhou,Keping Ma,Bernhard Schmid +38 more
TL;DR: Subtropical broad-leaved forests in southeastern China support a high diversity of woody plants and there is no evidence that rare species were responsible for the increasing adult species richness, as richness of rare species among both adults and recruits was independent of the successional stage.