U
Uelo Niinemets
Researcher at Estonian University of Life Sciences
Publications - 8
Citations - 464
Uelo Niinemets is an academic researcher from Estonian University of Life Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sexual dimorphism & Global warming. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 8 publications receiving 413 citations. Previous affiliations of Uelo Niinemets include Estonian Academy of Sciences.
Papers
More filters
World-wide leaf economics spectrum
Ian J. Wright,Peter B. Reich,Mark Westoby,David D. Ackerly,Zdravko Baruch,Frans Bongers,Jeannine Cavender-Bares,F. S. Chapin,Johannes H. C. Cornelissen,M. Diemer,Jaume Flexas,Eric Garnier,Philip K. Groom,Javier Gulías,Kouki Hikosaka,Byron B. Lamont,Tali D. Lee,Christopher H. Lusk,Jeremy J. Midgley,Marie-Laure Navas,Uelo Niinemets,Jacek Oleksyn,Noriyuki Osada,Hendrik Poorter,Pieter Poot,Lynda D. Prior,Vladimir I. Pyankov,Catherine Roumet,Sean C. Thomas,Mark G. Tjoelker,Erik J. Veneklaas,Rafael Villar +31 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Changes in the onset of spring growth in shrubland species in response to experimental warming along a north–south gradient in Europe
Patricia Prieto,Josep Peñuelas,Uelo Niinemets,Romà Ogaya,Inger Kappel Schmidt,Claus Beier,Albert Tietema,Alwyn Sowerby,Bridget A. Emmett,Edit Kovács Láng,Güorgy Kröel-Dulay,Barbara Lhotsky,Carla Cesaraccio,Grazia Pellizzaro,Giovanbattista de Dato,Constantino Sirca,Marc Estiarte +16 more
TL;DR: In this article, the onset of spring growth in European shrublands is advanced in response to the warmer conditions projected for the next two decades by climate models, and if there is a change, whether it differs across Europe.
Journal ArticleDOI
Climatic controls on leaf litter decomposition across European forests and grasslands revealed by reciprocal litter transplantation experiments
Miguel Portillo-Estrada,Miguel Portillo-Estrada,Mari Pihlatie,Janne Korhonen,Janne Levula,Arnoud Frumau,Andreas Ibrom,Jonas J. Lembrechts,Lourdes Morillas,László Horváth,Stephanie K. Jones,Uelo Niinemets +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors showed that cumulative air temperature, precipitation, soil water content, and air temperature were the best predictors for litter carbon and nitrogen remaining during decomposition.
Journal ArticleDOI
Sexual competition and N supply interactively affect the dimorphism and competiveness of opposite sexes in Populus cathayana
TL;DR: Sexual competition patterns and N supply levels significantly affected the sexual dimorphism and competitiveness, which may play an important role in spatial segregation of P. cathayana populations.
Journal ArticleDOI
Partial shading of lateral branches affects growth, and foliage nitrogen- and water-use efficiencies in the conifer Cunninghamia lanceolata growing in a warm monsoon climate
TL;DR: It is argued that such a non-autonomous branch response to changes in light conditions can improve whole-tree resource optimization and contribute to better understanding of tree growth and utilization of water and nitrogen under heterogeneous light conditions within tree canopies.