3,183 research outputs found
Biodiversity shapes tree species aggregations in tropical forests
Spatial patterns of conspecific trees are considered as the consequences of biological interactions and environmental influences. They also reflect species interactions in plant communities. However, biological attributes are often neglected while deliberating the factors shaping species distributions. As rising attentions are paid to spatial patterns of tropical forest trees, we noticed that seven Center of Tropical Forest Sites and four Forest Dynamic Plots in Asia and America have presented analogously high proportions of species with aggregated conspecific individuals coincidently. This phenomenon is distinctive and repudiates fundamental ecology hypotheses which suggested dispersed distributions of conspecific tropical trees due to intensive density and natural enemy pressures in tropical forests. We believe that similar aggregation patterns shared by these tropical forests implies the existence of structuring forces in biogeographical scale instead of habitat heterogeneity in local community scales as scientists have considered. To approach the factors contributing to this cross-continent spatial pattern of trees, we obtained and reviewed ecosystem attributes, including topography, temperature, precipitation, biodiversity, density, and biomass, of these forests. Here we show that the proportions of aggregated species are actually constants independent of any ecosystem attributes regardless the nature of these tropical forests. However, local biodiversity are the major factor determining the number of aggregated species and the aggregation of large individuals of these forests. Aggregation of large trees declines along rising biodiversity, while the numbers of aggregated species increase permanently along lifting biodiversity. We propose a possible equilibrium and saturated status of the tropical forests in accommodating aggregated species. Furthermore, the tight correlations of biodiversity and species aggregation strongly imply the importance of overlooked biological interactions in shaping the spatial patterns in the tropical forests
Elitism in Mathematics and Inequality
The Fields Medal, often referred as the Nobel Prize of mathematics, is
awarded to no more than four mathematician under the age of 40, every four
years. In recent years, its conferral has come under scrutiny of math
historians, for rewarding the existing elite rather than its original goal of
elevating mathematicians from under-represented communities. Prior studies of
elitism focus on citational practices and sub-fields; the structural forces
that prevent equitable access remain unclear. Here we show the flow of elite
mathematicians between countries and lingo-ethnic identity, using network
analysis and natural language processing on 240,000 mathematicians and their
advisor-advisee relationships. We found that the Fields Medal helped integrate
Japan after WWII, through analysis of the elite circle formed around Fields
Medalists. Arabic, African, and East Asian identities remain under-represented
at the elite level. Through analysis of inflow and outflow, we rebuts the myth
that minority communities create their own barriers to entry. Our results
demonstrate concerted efforts by international academic committees, such as
prize-giving, are a powerful force to give equal access. We anticipate our
methodology of academic genealogical analysis can serve as a useful diagnostic
for equality within academic fields
Ediacaran Macro Body Fossils
This paper, Ediacaran Macro Body Fossils, reports a new discovery of well preserved three dimensional macro body fossils of the Ediacaran Period in central YunNan province in the People's Republic of China. These body fossils will enable more detailed and in-depth exploration of the evolution of multi-cellular macro organisms on this planet, whereas in the past, researches could only rely on cast or imprint fossils
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