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Sarah Boulter

Researcher at Griffith University

Publications -  38
Citations -  1125

Sarah Boulter is an academic researcher from Griffith University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rainforest & Pollination. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 36 publications receiving 1014 citations. Previous affiliations of Sarah Boulter include United States Department of Agriculture & Cooperative Research Centre.

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Biodiversity meets the atmosphere: A global view of forest canopies

TL;DR: The forest canopy is the functional interface between 90% of Earth's terrestrial biomass and the atmosphere, and multidisciplinary research in the canopy has expanded concepts of global species richness, physiological processes, and the provision of ecosystem services.
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Putting plant resistance traits on the map: a test of the idea that plants are better defended at lower latitudes

Angela T. Moles, +50 more
- 01 Aug 2011 - 
TL;DR: The results do not support the hypothesis that tropical plants have higher levels of resistance traits than do plants from higher latitudes, and if anything, plants haveHigher resistance toward the poles.
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Correlations between physical and chemical defences in plants: tradeoffs, syndromes, or just many different ways to skin a herbivorous cat?

Angela T. Moles, +48 more
- 01 Apr 2013 - 
TL;DR: It is suggested that a lack of consistent defence syndromes may be adaptive, resulting from selective pressure to deploy a different combination of defences to coexisting species.
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Family, visitors and the weather: patterns of flowering in tropical rain forests of northern Australia

TL;DR: A data base on the flowering phenology of the Wet Tropics bioregion of far northern Queensland, Australia, has been constructed, based upon over 36,774 records from two Queensland-based herbaria as mentioned in this paper.
Journal Article

Detecting biodiversity changes along climatic gradients: the IBISCA-Queensland Project

TL;DR: The IBISCA-Queensland project established 20 permanent plots over an altitudinal range of 300 m to 1100 m above sea-level (d.s.l.) in rainforest within Lamington National Park, south-east Queensland as discussed by the authors.