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Till Kleinebecker

Till Kleinebecker

D-Index & Metrics

Ecology and Evolution

D-Index
42
Citations
7231
World Ranking
5561
National Ranking
294

Overview

Till Kleinebecker is affiliated with the University of Münster in Germany. Their research focuses on environmental and agricultural sciences with a specialization in the study of ecosystems, biodiversity, and land use impacts. Their scholarly work extensively covers the dynamics of ecosystems and how different factors influence biodiversity and ecosystem services.

The main fields of study for Till Kleinebecker include:

  • Environmental Science
  • Agricultural and Biological Sciences

Within these broad fields, their subfields of study encompass:

  • Global and Planetary Change
  • Nature and Landscape Conservation
  • Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
  • Plant Science
  • Ecology

Till Kleinebecker's research covers a variety of interconnected topics, including:

  • Ecology and Vegetation Dynamics Studies
  • Land Use and Ecosystem Services
  • Plant and animal studies
  • Soil Carbon and Nitrogen Dynamics
  • Forest Management and Policy
  • Conservation, Biodiversity, and Resource Management
  • Botany and Plant Ecology Studies

Frequent collaborators in their research include:

  • Valentin H. Klaus
  • Norbert Hölzel
  • Daniel Prati
  • Markus Fischer
  • Peter Manning

The venues where Till Kleinebecker has published multiple works indicate an emphasis on ecology and environmental research. These include:

  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
  • Nature Ecology & Evolution
  • Nature Communications
  • The Science of The Total Environment
  • Science Advances

Among the recent notable publications by Till Kleinebecker are:

  • "Land-use intensity alters networks between biodiversity, ecosystem functions, and services" (2020, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences)
  • "The results of biodiversity-ecosystem functioning experiments are realistic" (2020, Nature Ecology & Evolution)
  • "Contrasting responses of above- and belowground diversity to multiple components of land-use intensity" (2021, Nature Communications)
  • "The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales" (2022, Nature Ecology & Evolution)
  • "Landscape management strategies for multifunctionality and social equity" (2023, Nature Sustainability)

Best Publications

  • Land use intensification alters ecosystem multifunctionality via loss of biodiversity and changes to functional composition

    Eric Allan;Pete Manning;Fabian Alt;Julia Binkenstein

  • Biodiversity at multiple trophic levels is needed for ecosystem multifunctionality

    Santiago Soliveres;Fons van der Plas;Peter Manning;Daniel Prati

  • A quantitative index of land-use intensity in grasslands: Integrating mowing, grazing and fertilization

    Nico Blüthgen;Carsten F. Dormann;Daniel Prati;Valentin H. Klaus

  • Interannual variation in land-use intensity enhances grassland multidiversity.

    Eric Allan;Oliver Bossdorf;Oliver Bossdorf;Carsten F. Dormann;Daniel Prati

  • Land-use intensity alters networks between biodiversity, ecosystem functions, and services.

    María R. Felipe-Lucia;Santiago Soliveres;Caterina Penone;Markus Fischer

  • Early stage litter decomposition across biomes

    Ika Djukic;Sebastian Kepfer-Rojas;Inger Kappel Schmidt;Klaus Steenberg Larsen

  • The results of biodiversity–ecosystem functioning experiments are realistic

    Malte Jochum;Malte Jochum;Markus Fischer;Forest Isbell;Christiane Roscher

  • Land use imperils plant and animal community stability through changes in asynchrony rather than diversity

    Nico Blüthgen;Nadja K. Simons;Kirsten Jung;Daniel Prati

  • The supply of multiple ecosystem services requires biodiversity across spatial scales

    Unknown

  • Locally rare species influence grassland ecosystem multifunctionality

    Santiago Soliveres;Peter Manning;Daniel Prati;Martin M. Gossner

  • Contrasting responses of above- and belowground diversity to multiple components of land-use intensity

    Gaëtane Le Provost;Jan Thiele;Catrin Westphal;Caterina Penone

  • Unmanned aerial vehicles as innovative remote sensing platforms for high‐resolution infrared imagery to support restoration monitoring in cut‐over bogs

    Christian Knoth;Birte Klein;Torsten Prinz;Till Kleinebecker

  • Landscape management strategies for multifunctionality and social equity

    Unknown

  • Grassland management intensification weakens the associations among the diversities of multiple plant and animal taxa

    Pete Manning;Martin M. Gossner;Martin M. Gossner;Oliver Bossdorf;Oliver Bossdorf;Eric Allan

  • Plant functional trait shifts explain concurrent changes in the structure and function of grassland soil microbial communities

    Runa S. Boeddinghaus;Sven Marhan;Doreen Berner;Steffen Boch

  • Evidence from the real world: 15N natural abundances reveal enhanced nitrogen use at high plant diversity in Central European grasslands

    Till Kleinebecker;Norbert Hölzel;Daniel Prati;Barbara Schmitt

  • Gradients of continentality and moisture in South Patagonian ombrotrophic peatland vegetation

    Till Kleinebecker;Norbert Hölzel;Andreas Vogel

  • Above- and belowground biodiversity jointly tighten the P cycle in agricultural grasslands

    Yvonne Oelmann;Markus Lange;Sophia Leimer;Christiane Roscher

  • Will I stay or will I go? Plant species‐specific response and tolerance to high land‐use intensity in temperate grassland ecosystems

    Verena Busch;Verena Busch;Valentin H. Klaus;Valentin H. Klaus;Deborah Schäfer;Daniel Prati

  • NIRS meets Ellenberg's indicator values: Prediction of moisture and nitrogen values of agricultural grassland vegetation by means of near-infrared spectral characteristics

    Valentin H. Klaus;Till Kleinebecker;Steffen Boch;Jörg Müller

  • Eleven years' data of grassland management in Germany

    Juliane Vogt;Valentin H. Klaus;Steffen Both;Cornelia Fürstenau

  • Prediction of δ13C and δ15N in plant tissues with near-infrared reflectance spectroscopy

    Till Kleinebecker;Sebastian R. Schmidt;Christian Fritz;Alfons J. P. Smolders

  • Soil carbon sequestration due to post‐Soviet cropland abandonment: estimates from a large‐scale soil organic carbon field inventory

    Tim-Martin Wertebach;Norbert Hölzel;Immo Kämpf;Immo Kämpf;Andrey Yurtaev

  • Nutrient concentrations and fibre contents of plant community biomass reflect species richness patterns along a broad range of land-use intensities among agricultural grasslands

    Valentin H. Klaus;Till Kleinebecker;Norbert Hölzel;Nico Blüthgen

  • Changes in wet meadow vegetation after 20 years of different management in a field experiment (North-West Germany)

    Kathrin Poptcheva;Peter Schwartze;Andreas Vogel;Till Kleinebecker

  • Sedimentation-induced eutrophication in large river floodplains – An obstacle to restoration?

    V.H. Klaus;J. Sintermann;T. Kleinebecker;N. Hölzel

Frequent Co-Authors

Norbert Hölzel
Norbert Hölzel University of Münster
Valentin H. Klaus
Valentin H. Klaus Ruhr University Bochum
Markus Fischer
Markus Fischer University of Bern
Daniel Prati
Daniel Prati University of Bern
Steffen Boch
Steffen Boch Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research
Wolfgang W. Weisser
Wolfgang W. Weisser Technical University of Munich
Ingo Schöning
Ingo Schöning Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry
Eric Allan
Eric Allan University of Bern
Marion Schrumpf
Marion Schrumpf Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry

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