Sven Rubanschi
University of Regensburg
4 Papers
1 Citations
Sven Rubanschi is an academic researcher from University of Regensburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pollinator & Biotope. The author has co-authored 1 publications. Previous affiliations of Sven Rubanschi include Technische Universität München.
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Papers
The importance of small natural features in forests-How the overgrowth of forest gaps affects indigenous flower supply and flower-visiting insects and seed sets of six Campanula species.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated how the overgrowth process affects flower supply, flower visitors, and reproduction of Campanula species, and found that forest gaps and their size positively affected the number of flowering plant species in the surrounding area.
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Modelling potential biotope composition on a regional scale revealed that climate variables are stronger drivers than soil variables
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors described the potential biotope composition of an area in response to environmental conditions and proposed a model to estimate the potential co-occurrence of biotopes in one area.
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Assessing the conservation and restoration potential of biotopes in a central European region
Sven Rubanschi,Christian Hof,Wolfgang W. Weisser,Sebastian T. Meyer +3 more
TL;DR: This study assesses conservation and restoration potential of 29 biotopes in Bavaria, Germany, using Maxent model, identifying 69.57% conservation potential and 22 biotopes with restoration potential, suggesting priority areas for conservation and restoration efforts.
The road to integrate climate change projections with regional land‐use–biodiversity models
Juliano Sarmento Cabral,Alma Mendoza-Ponce,Johannes Oberpriller,Anne Mimet,Julia Kieslinger,Thomas Berger,Alice Classen,Stefan Fallert,Florian Hartig,Christian Hof,Markus Hoffmann,Thomas Knoke,Andreas Krause,Anne Lewerentz,Perdita Pohle,Uta Raeder,Anja Rammig,Sarah Redlich,Sven Rubanschi,Wolfgang W. Weisser,Daniel Vedder,Peter H. Verburg,Damaris Zurell +22 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors focus on the indirect effects of climate change on biodiversity via its effects on land-use change as well as feedbacks into land use and climate, following direct and indirect pathways, such as indirect pathways from climate change into biodiversity change via climate-driven changes in land use.