Tropical montane ecosystems are the centers of biodiversity, and Janzen proposed that mountain climate variability plays a key role in sustaining this biodiversity. We test this hypothesis for soil bacteria and fungi along a 265-1,400 m elevational gradient on Hainan Island of tropical China, representing diverse vegetation types from deciduous monsoon forest to cloud forest. We found that bacterial and fungal diversity declined as elevation increased, and the dissimilarity of both groups increased with increasing separation in elevation, although changes in bacteria were larger than in fungi.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnderstanding flexibility in the social structure and mating strategies of the world's last remaining population (35 individuals) of wild Hainan gibbons (Nomascus hainanus) is critical for developing effective management plans to aid in their population recovery. Three of the five remaining Hainan gibbon groups (A, B, and C) currently live in a social unit characterized by two or three adult males, two reproducing adult females, and offspring. A fourth group (D) contains one adult male, two adult females, and offspring, and Group E contains a single adult male-adult female pair with a young infant.
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