J
Jutta Kapfer
Researcher at Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute
Publications - 29
Citations - 1532
Jutta Kapfer is an academic researcher from Norwegian Forest and Landscape Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vegetation & Species richness. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 27 publications receiving 1110 citations. Previous affiliations of Jutta Kapfer include University of Bergen.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Accelerated increase in plant species richness on mountain summits is linked to warming
Manuel J. Steinbauer,Manuel J. Steinbauer,John-Arvid Grytnes,Gerald Jurasinski,Aino Kulonen,Jonathan Lenoir,Harald Pauli,Harald Pauli,Christian Rixen,Manuela Winkler,Manuela Winkler,Manfred Bardy-Durchhalter,Manfred Bardy-Durchhalter,Elena Barni,Anne D. Bjorkman,Anne D. Bjorkman,Frank T. Breiner,Frank T. Breiner,Sarah Burg,Patryk Czortek,Melissa A. Dawes,Anna Delimat,Stefan Dullinger,Brigitta Erschbamer,Vivian A. Felde,Olatz Fernández-Arberas,Kjetil F. Fossheim,Daniel Gómez-García,Damien Georges,Damien Georges,Erlend T. Grindrud,Sylvia Haider,Siri V. Haugum,Hanne Henriksen,María J. Herreros,Bogdan Jaroszewicz,Francesca Jaroszynska,Francesca Jaroszynska,Robert Kanka,Jutta Kapfer,Kari Klanderud,Ingolf Kühn,Ingolf Kühn,Andrea Lamprecht,Andrea Lamprecht,Magalì Matteodo,Umberto Morra di Cella,Signe Normand,Arvid Odland,Siri Lie Olsen,Sara Palacio,Martina Petey,Veronika Piscová,Blazena Sedlakova,Klaus Steinbauer,Klaus Steinbauer,Veronika Stöckli,Jens-Christian Svenning,Guido Teppa,Jean-Paul Theurillat,Pascal Vittoz,Sarah J. Woodin,Niklaus E. Zimmermann,Niklaus E. Zimmermann,Sonja Wipf +64 more
TL;DR: Analysis of changes in plant species richness on mountain summits over the past 145 years suggests that increased climatic warming has led to an acceleration in species richness increase, strikingly synchronized with accelerated global warming.
BookDOI
European Red List of Habitats : Part 2. Terrestrial and freshwater habitats
John Janssen,J.S. Rodwell,M. Garcia Criado,S. Gubbay,T. Haynes,Ana Nieto,N. Sanders,Flavia Landucci,Javier Loidi,A. Ssymank,Teemu Tahvanainen,M. Valderrabano,A. Acosta,Mora Aronsson,Gertie Arts,F. Altorre,Erwin Bergmeier,R.-J. Bijlsma,Frédéric Bioret,Claudia Bita-Nicolae,Idoia Biurrun,M. Calix,Jorge Capelo,Andraz Carni,M. Chytry,Jürgen Dengler,Panayotis Dimopoulos,F. Essi,H. Gardfjeil,Daniela Gigante,G. Giusso del Gaido,Michal Hájek,Florian Jansen,Jan B.M.J. Jansen,Jutta Kapfer,A. Mickolajczak,José Antonio Molina,Zsolt Molnár,D. Paternoster,A. Piernik,B. Poulin,B. Renaux,Joop H.J. Schaminée,Kateřina Šumberová,Heikki Toivonen,Tiina Tonteri,Ioannis Tsiripidis,Rossen Tzonev,Milan Valachovič +48 more
TL;DR: The European Red List of Habitats as discussed by the authors provides a new and all embracing tool to review commitments for ecosystem protection and restoration within the EU2020 biodiversity strategy. But it does not provide a comprehensive overview of the entire ecosystem.
Journal ArticleDOI
Resurveying historical vegetation data - opportunities and challenges.
Jutta Kapfer,Radim Hédl,Gerald Jurasinski,Martin Kopecký,Martin Kopecký,Fride Høistad Schei,John-Arvid Grytnes +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the properties of vegetation resurveys, distinguishing basic types of plots according to relocation error, and highlight the potential of such data types for studying vegetation dynamics and their drivers.
Journal ArticleDOI
Identifying the driving factors behind observed elevational range shifts on European mountains
John-Arvid Grytnes,Jutta Kapfer,Jutta Kapfer,Gerald Jurasinski,Hilary H. Birks,Hanne Henriksen,Kari Klanderud,Arvid Odland,Mikael Ohlson,Sonja Wipf,H. John B. Birks,H. John B. Birks,H. John B. Birks +12 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the same species tend to move up on different mountains, and the observed shifts in the upper range limit of alpine plants over 40 to 100 years on 114 mountains.
Journal ArticleDOI
Upward shift in elevational plant species ranges in Sikkilsdalen, central Norway
TL;DR: In this paper, a plot-based phytosociological study from Sikkilsdalen, central Norway, originally executed between 1922 and 1932 was used to investigate several aspects of elevational shifts in species ranges.