Browsing by Autor "David Neill"
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Item type: Item , Increasing dominance of large lianas in Amazonian forests(Nature Portfolio, 2002) Oliver L. Phillips; Ramsés V. Martínez; Luzmila Arroyo; T. R. Baker; Timothy J. Killeen; Simon L. Lewis; Y. Malhi; Abel Monteagudo Mendoza; David Neill; P. Núñez VargasItem type: Item , <strong>Bryophytes from the Cordillera del Cóndor, Ecuador</strong>(2009) Steven P. Churchill; David Neill; Edison Jaramillo C.; Wilson QuizhpeA bryophyte inventory was conducted in the tepui-like region of the Cordillera del Cóndor in southern Ecuador. A total of 166 bryophytes are recorded for the Cóndor. Hepatics are represented by 50 species, 2 subspecies, 33 genera, 16 families, for hornworts 1 species, genus, family, and for mosses 111 species, 2 varieties, 67 genera, and 32 families. Ochrobryum gardneri is a new record for EcuadorItem type: Item , Studies in Neotropical Araliaceae. IX. Four New Species of Sciodaphyllum from the Cordillera Abitagua, Eastern Andes of Ecuador(Missouri Botanical Garden Press, 2021) David Neill; Porter P. Lowry; Gregory M. Plunkett; M. Marcela Mora; Efrén Merino; Mercedes Asanza; Lou JostFollowing the recent resurrection of Sciodaphyllum P. Browne (Araliaceae) to accommodate the majority of Neotropical species formerly included in Schefflera J. R. Forst. & G. Forst., we have begun to describe the many new members of this genus documented during field and herbarium studies conducted over the past several years. Here we describe and illustrate four new hemi-epiphytic species of Sciodaphyllum from a small area of the eastern Andes in central Ecuador: the western slopes of the Cordillera Abitagua in canton Baños, Tungurahua Province, in the buffer zone of Llanganates National Park. The four new species described, all collected within a few days in an area of less than 10 km² and not known from any other locality, are S. merinoi D. A. Neill, G. M. Plunkett, Lowry & M. M. Mora, S. purocafeanum G. M. Plunkett, M. M. Mora, D. A. Neill & Lowry, S. recaldiorum Lowry, G. M. Plunkett, M. M. Mora & D. A. Neill, and S. zunacense M. M. Mora, Lowry, G. M. Plunkett & D. A. Neill. The conservation status of all four species is assessed as Vulnerable (VU D2) according to the IUCN Red List criteria.