special section - science · mountain land-scapes host a rich variety of fl ora and fauna,...
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1092 00 MONTH 20XX • VOL XXX ISSUE XXXX sciencemag.org SCIENCE
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The summit of Chimborazo in
Ecuador, two centuries after
Alexander von Humboldt’s expedition.
NEWS
Fire on the mountain p. 1094
Hypoxia city p. 1098
Sunken summits p. 1104
REVIEWS
Humboldt’s enigma: What causes global patterns of mountain biodiversity? p. 1108
Building mountain biodiversity: Geological and evolutionary processes p. 1114
Above- and belowground linkages shape responses of mountain vegetation to climate change p. 1119
A global perspective on tropical montane rivers p. 1124
RELATED ITEMS
c EDITORIAL P. 1061
c PERSPECTIVE P. 1074
c POLICY FORUM P. 1084
c BOOKS ET AL. P. 1088
c PODCAST
c VIDEO
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1092 13 SEPTEMBER 2019 • VOL 365 ISSUE 6458 sciencemag.org SCIENCE
Published by AAAS
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13 SEPTEMBER 2019 • VOL 365 ISSUE 6458 1093SCIENCE sciencemag.org
HIGH LIVING
Relief begets diversity. Mountain land-
scapes host a rich variety of fl ora and
fauna, engendered by their concen-
trated diversity of climatic and ecolog-
ical conditions. Two centuries on from
Alexander von Humboldt’s pioneering
research in the Tropical Andes, moun-
tains remain fertile ground for study-
ing the interplay between the biological and
physical environment and for understanding
the evolutionary adaptations that permit sur-
vival of animals, plants, and people at higher
elevations. Mountains under the sea, too, are
magnets for a diversity of life, much of which
has yet to be explored and described.
Mountain environments are also fragile, as
they are in the fi ring line of human exploita-
tion and climate change. As temperatures rise,
vegetation zones shift upslope, squeezing the
ranges of montane organisms. As glaciers re-
cede and forests dwindle, the capacity of the
montane environment to supply water to sur-
rounding lowlands decreases. The protection
of the world’s uplands, for their natural riches
and the human communities that rely on them,
is becoming increasingly urgent.
By David Malakof and Andrew Sugden
Published by AAAS
on July 6, 2021
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High livingDavid Malakoff and Andrew Sugden
DOI: 10.1126/science.aaz3670 (6458), 1092-1093.365Science
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