Greta La Bella

Greta La Bella
Roma Tre University | UNIROMA3 · Department of Biology

PhD

About

14
Publications
4,374
Reads
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55
Citations
Introduction
Skills and Expertise
Additional affiliations
January 2020 - June 2021
University of Padua
Position
  • Postgraduate Internship
Education
October 2017 - December 2019
University of Padua
Field of study
  • Environmental and Forestry Sciences
October 2013 - February 2017
University of Rome Tor Vergata
Field of study
  • Biology

Publications

Publications (14)
Preprint
Full-text available
Aim Humans have spread plants globally for millennia, inadvertently causing ecological disruptions. However, biological invasions also provide a unique opportunity to study the process of niche dynamics, through which species adapt their niche when confronted with novel environments. Focusing on the Mediterranean Basin, we assessed 1) which traits...
Article
Full-text available
Understanding the relationship between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning (BEF) is crucial to predicting the consequences of ongoing global biodiversity loss. However, what drives BEF relationships in natural ecosystems under globally changing conditions remains poorly understood. To address this knowledge gap, we applied a trait‐based approach...
Article
Full-text available
Invasive alien species represent a major threat to global biodiversity and the sustenance of ecosystems. Globally, mountain ecosystems have shown a degree of resistance to invasive species due to their distinctive ecological features. However, in recent times, the construction of linear infrastructure, such as roads, might weaken this resistance, e...
Article
Full-text available
Trait‐based ecology has already revealed main independent axes of trait variation defining trait spaces that summarize plant adaptive strategies, but often ignoring intraspecific trait variability (ITV). By using empirical ITV‐level data for two independent dimensions of leaf form and function and 167 species across five habitat types (coastal dune...
Article
Full-text available
Global change pressures are highlighting the need to better understand the mechanisms driving the temporal stability of natural communities under different environmental conditions. There is ample evidence that species richness helps communities to withstand environmental fluctuations and stabilise over time. However, it is still debated whether ri...
Article
Full-text available
The role of plant traits in shaping community assembly along environmental gradients is a topic of ongoing research. It is well accepted that plant traits of aboveground organs tend to be conservative in stressful conditions. However, there is limited understanding of how belowground traits respond. Plants may have similar strategies above and belo...
Article
Full-text available
The role of plant traits in shaping community assembly along environmental gradients is a topic of ongoing research. It is well accepted that plant traits of aboveground organs tend to be conservative in stressful conditions. However, there is limited understanding of how belowground traits respond. Plants may have similar strategies above and belo...
Book
Full-text available
The role of plant traits in shaping community assembly along environmental gradients is a topic of ongoing research. It is well accepted that plant traits of aboveground organs tend to be conservative in stressful conditions. However, there is limited understanding of how belowground traits respond. Plants may have similar strategies above and belo...
Article
Full-text available
By occupying the transition zones between the marine and terrestrial world, coastal dunes are valuable ecosystems with a highly specialized flora and fauna, providing also crucial services to humans. However, despite their high naturalistic value, coastal dunes are among the most threatened ecosystems in Italy and the Mediterranean basin. High anth...
Conference Paper
Natural and anthropogenic disturbances are key factors in forest vegetation dynamics. Forest disturbance regimes are rapidly changing, with increasing magnitude and frequency of extreme events such as pathogen invasions , wildfires and windstorms, possibly as a consequence of climate change [1]. In October 2018, the "Vaia" storm hit the Eastern Ita...
Article
Full-text available
In mountains, current land-use changes are altering plant communities of semi-natural grasslands with potential cascading effects on associated herbivores. Besides vegetation changes, temperature is also a key driver of insect diversity, and in the European Alps is predicted to increase by 0.25 °C per decade. Understanding herbivore responses to te...
Article
Full-text available
Aim Climate warming and increasing human disturbance are expected to promote non‐native plant invasions in mountain ecosystems. Although biological invasions are also expected to be modulated by biotic interactions, it is still not clear how invertebrate herbivores can affect plant invasion dynamics. Using a large manipulative experiment, we aimed...

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