
Publications of Norbert Kunert
All genres
Journal Article (22)
1.
Journal Article
49 (1), pp. 1 - 10 (2019)
Relevance of wood anatomy and size of Amazonian trees in the determination and allometry of sapwood area. Acta Amazonica 2.
Journal Article
220 (1), pp. 111 - 120 (2018)
Living on borrowed time – Amazonian trees use decade‐old storage carbon to survive for months after complete stem girdling. New Phytologist 3.
Journal Article
25, pp. 1128 - 1131 (2017)
Treasures in insect collections: the future of the bomb-radiocarbon analysis. Insect Science 4.
Journal Article
239, pp. 47 - 57 (2017)
A revised hydrological model for the Central Amazon: The importance of emergent canopy trees in the forest water budget. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 5.
Journal Article
16 (1), pp. 177 - 191 (2017)
Comparison of CO2 and O2 fluxes demonstrate retention of respired CO2 in tree stems from a range of tree species. Biogeosciences 6.
Journal Article
205, pp. 80 - 83 (2016)
Curios relationship revealed by looking at long term data sets—The geometry and allometric scaling of diel xylem sap flux in tropical trees. Journal of Plant Physiology 7.
Journal Article
48 (6), p. 926 (2016)
The rich coast — or the El Dorado of tropical ecology. Biotropica 8.
Journal Article
3, pp. 46 - 48 (2016)
Wiederaufforstung in den Tropen mit Mischbeständen. AFZ, der Wald 9.
Journal Article
29, pp. 1431 - 1445 (2015)
Ecological applications of differences in the hydraulic efficiency of palms and broad leaved trees. Trees 10.
Journal Article
6 (2), pp. 450 - 463 (2015)
Allometric equations for estimating biomass of Euterpe precatoria, the most abundant palm species in the Amazon. Forests 11.
Journal Article
29 (1), pp. 19 - 32 (2015)
Dimethyl sulfide in the Amazon rain forest. Global Biogeochemical Cycles 12.
Journal Article
6 (8), pp. 2530 - 2544 (2015)
Modeling potential impacts of planting palms or tree in small holder fruit plantations on ecohydrological processes in the Central Amazon. Forests 13.
Journal Article
213, pp. 183 - 192 (2015)
Higher tree transpiration due to road-associated edge effects in a tropical moist lowland forest. Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 14.
Journal Article
6 (6), pp. 2029 - 2046 (2015)
Are mixed tropical tree plantations more resistant to drought than monocultures? Forests 15.
Journal Article
47 (6), pp. 650 - 653 (2015)
Xylem sap flux affects conventional stem CO2 efflux measurements in tropical trees. Biotropica 16.
Journal Article
8 (1), pp. 1 - 12 (2015)
Tree water uptake in a tropical plantation varying in tree diversity: interspecific differences, seasonal shifts and complementarity. Ecohydrology 17.
Journal Article
46 (6), p. 773 (2014)
Evaluating the future of our forests. Biotropica 18.
Journal Article
95 (9), pp. 2479 - 2492 (2014)
Tropical tree diversity enhances light capture through crown plasticity and spatial and temporal niche differences. Ecology 19.
Journal Article
197 (2), pp. 353 - 355 (2013)
What's the flux? Unraveling how CO2 fluxes from trees reflect underlying physiological processes. New Phytologist 20.
Journal Article
39 (1), pp. 139 - 144 (2012)
Effects of xylem water transport on CO2 efflux of woody tissue in a tropical tree, Amazonas State. Hoehnea