O
Oliver L. Phillips
Researcher at University of Leeds
Publications - 373
Citations - 59425
Oliver L. Phillips is an academic researcher from University of Leeds. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biodiversity & Biomass (ecology). The author has an hindex of 98, co-authored 336 publications receiving 50569 citations. Previous affiliations of Oliver L. Phillips include University of York & University of Brasília.
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Soil water-holding capacity and monodominance in Southern Amazon tropical forests
Ben Hur Marimon-Junior,John Du Vall Hay,Imma Oliveras,Halina Soares Jancoski,Ricardo Keichi Umetsu,Ted R. Feldpausch,David W. Galbraith,Emanuel Gloor,Oliver L. Phillips,Beatriz Schwantes Marimon +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the hypothesis that low soil water-holding capacity is the main factor driving the monodominance of Brosimum rubescens in a monominant forest in Southern Amazonia.
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Climate and fragmentation affect forest structure at the southern border of Amazonia
Simone Matias Reis,Simone Matias Reis,Beatriz Schwantes Marimon,Ben Hur Marimon Junior,Paulo S. Morandi,Paulo S. Morandi,Edmar Almeida de Oliveira,Fernando Elias,Eder Carvalho das Neves,Bianca de Oliveira,Denis Silva Nogueira,Ricardo Keichi Umetsu,Ted R. Feldpausch,Ted R. Feldpausch,Oliver L. Phillips +14 more
TL;DR: The remaining forests in the extensive contact zone between southern Amazonia (seasonal rain forest) and the Cerrado (savanna) biomes are at risk due to intense land-use and climate change as mentioned in this paper.
Journal Article
Ficus insipida (Moraceae): ethnobotany and ecology of an Amazonian anthelmintic
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Contrasting responses of woody and grassland ecosystems to increased CO2 as water supply varies
Yude Pan,Robert B. Jackson,David Y. Hollinger,Oliver L. Phillips,R. Nowak,Richard J. Norby,Ram Oren,Peter B. Reich,Andreas Lüscher,Kevin Mueller,Josef Nösberger,Clenton E. Owensby,Richard A. Birdsey,John Hom,Yiqi Luo +14 more
TL;DR: In this article , the eCO2 enhancement of annual aboveground net primary productivity is sensitive to annual precipitation and that this sensitivity differs between woody and grassland ecosystems, showing that during wetter years, CO2 enhancement increases in woody ecosystems but declines in grass-dominated systems.
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Edaphic controls on ecosystem-level carbon allocation in two contrasting Amazon forests
E. M. Jimenez,Maria Cristina Peñuela-Mora,Carlos A. Sierra,Jon Lloyd,Oliver L. Phillips,Flavio Moreno,Diego Navarrete,Adriana Prieto,Agustín Rudas,Esteban Álvarez,Carlos A. Quesada,Maria Angeles Grande-Ortiz,Antonio García-Abril,Sandra Patiño +13 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated three different aspects of stand-level carbon allocation (biomass, NPP, and its partitioning) in two amazon forests on different soils (nutrient-rich clay soils versus nutrient-poor sandy soils) but otherwise growing under similar conditions.