O. Broennimann
University of Lausanne
9 Papers
17 Citations
O. Broennimann is an academic researcher from University of Lausanne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Disturbance (ecology). The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 9 publications.
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Papers
More than range exposure: Global otter vulnerability to climate change
TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed an integrated vulnerability index to climate change for world's freshwater otters based on present and future predictions of species distributions and found that for a given species, climate change can have both positive and negative effects on different components of extrinsic exposure, and that measures of species' sensitivity are not necessarily congruent with measures of exposure.
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Time series animations of African vegetation change using pollen records for: "Asymmetric response of forest and grassy biomes to climate variability across the African Humid Period: influenced by anthropogenic disturbance?"
Leanne N. Phelps,Manuel Chevalier,Timothy M. Shanahan,Julie C. Aleman,Colin J Courtney-Mustaphi,Christopher A. Kiahtipes,O. Broennimann,Rob Marchant,John Shekeine,Lynne J. Quick,Basil A. S. Davis,Katie Manning,Antoine Guisan +12 more
- 17 Sep 2019
TL;DR: In this article, the authors apply a statistical multivariate envelope approach to subfossil pollen data and climate model outputs to better illustrate the effects of climate-disturbance-ecosystem interactions on continental-scale vegetation change.
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Asymmetric response of forest and grassy biomes to climate variability across the African Humid Period: influenced by anthropogenic disturbance?
Leanne N. Phelps,Manuel Chevalier,Timothy M. Shanahan,Julie C. Aleman,Colin J Courtney-Mustaphi,Christopher A. Kiahtipes,O. Broennimann,Rob Marchant,John Shekeine,Lynne J. Quick,Basil A. S. Davis,Antoine Guisan,Katie Manning +12 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors apply a statistical multivariate envelope approach to subfossil pollen data and climate model outputs to better illustrate the effects of climate-disturbance-ecosystem interactions on continental-scale vegetation change.
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Plastid DNA variation in Prunus serotina var. serotina (Rosaceae), a North American tree invading Europe
Blaise Petitpierre,Marie Pairon,O. Broennimann,Anne-Laure Jacquemart,Antoine Guisan,Guillaume Besnard,Guillaume Besnard +6 more
TL;DR: Plastid DNA variation was first investigated in both its native and invasive ranges using microsatellite loci and sequences of three intergenic spacers and a combination of five markers was finally proposed for phylogeographic studies in P. serotina.