Publications by authors named "E February"

The foragers of the southern African Middle Stone Age were among the first humans to adapt their environment and its resources to their needs. They heat-treated stone to alter its mechanical properties, transformed yellow colorants into red pigments and produced moldable adhesive substances from plants. Until now, only Podocarpus conifers have been identified as the botanical origin of Middle Stone Age adhesives.

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Increasing rainfall variability is widely expected under future climate change scenarios. How will savanna trees and grasses be affected by growing season dry spells and altered seasonality and how tightly coupled are tree-grass phenologies with rainfall? We measured tree and grass responses to growing season dry spells and dry season rainfall. We also tested whether the phenologies of 17 deciduous woody species and the Soil Adjusted Vegetation Index of grasses were related to rainfall between 2019 and 2023.

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Studying the earliest archaeological adhesives has implications for our understanding of human cognition. In southern Africa, the oldest adhesives were made by in the Middle Stone Age. Chemical studies have shown that these adhesives were made from a local conifer of the family.

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Article Synopsis
  • Recent research suggests that plant root traits significantly influence the boundaries and communities of biomes, particularly in South Africa's Fynbos and Afrotemperate Forest regions.
  • The study examined two primary hypotheses: one, that plants with thin roots prevail in nutrient-poor environments; and two, that these traits, combined with fire, help maintain the distinct separation between the two biomes.
  • Key findings indicated that Fynbos plants have the thinnest roots globally and that intense competition for nitrogen, rather than phosphorus, plays a critical role in preventing Forest species from establishing in Fynbos, revealing a complex interaction between plant traits and resource availability in shaping biome boundaries.
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Global climate change is predicted to increase the frequency of droughts, with major impacts on tropical savannas. It has been suggested that during drought, increased soil moisture and nutrients on termite mounds could benefit plants but it is unclear how such benefits could cascade to affect insect communities. Here, we describe the effects of drought on vegetation structure, the cascading implications for invertebrates and how termite mounds influence such effects.

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