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Dive into the research topics where Christian H. Schulze is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian H. Schulze.


Ecological Applications | 2004

BIODIVERSITY INDICATOR GROUPS OF TROPICAL LAND-USE SYSTEMS: COMPARING PLANTS, BIRDS, AND INSECTS

Christian H. Schulze; Matthias Waltert; Paul J. A. Kessler; Ramadhanil Pitopang; Dorthe Veddeler; Michael Mühlenberg; S. Robbert Gradstein; Christoph Leuschner; Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter; Teja Tscharntke

Tropical landscapes are dominated by land-use systems, but their contribution to the conservation of biodiversity is largely unknown. Since changes in biodiversity in response to human impact are known to differ widely among taxonomic groups and guilds, there is a need for multidisciplinary collaboration of plant, vertebrate, and invertebrate experts. We used inventories of trees, understory plants, birds (subdivided into endemics, insectivores, frugivores/nectar feeders), butterflies (endemics, fruit feeders), and dung bee- tles in Sulawesi (Indonesia) to characterize a gradient from near-primary to secondary forests, agroforestry systems, and annual crops. As expected, overall species richness tended to decrease within this gradient of increasing habitat modification, but, in contrast to pre- vious studies, we found the species richness between most taxonomic groups to be signif- icantly correlated (36 out of 38 pairwise comparisons). However, on average only 48% of the variance could be explained (within the five main groups), and only a few taxonomic groups/guilds turned out to be good predictors for others: for example, trees for fruit- and nectar-feeding birds (88% explanation) and fruit-feeding butterflies (83%), endemic birds for endemic butterflies (72%), and frugivorous/nectar-feeding birds for fruit-feeding but- terflies (67%). Although biodiversity of land-use systems showed taxonomic group- and guild-specific differences, most groups were affected in a similar way by habitat modifi- cation. Near-primary forest sites proved to be of principal importance for conservation; however, land-use systems such as secondary forests (for understory plants, birds, and butterflies) and agroforestry systems (for butterflies) supported relatively high numbers of species and might play a significant role for biodiversity conservation in tropical landscapes.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1964

The syndrome of supravalvular aortic stenosis, peripheral pulmonary stenosis, mental retardation and similar facial appearance

Alois J. Beuren; Christian H. Schulze; Paul Eberle; Dietrich Harmjanz; Jürgen Apitz

Abstract A series of 10 patients with supravalvular aortic stenosis and a similar facial appearance with mental retardation is described. The patients have identical dental malformations in addition, and 7 patients examined by right heart angiocardiography have multiple, bilateral peripheral pulmonary stenosis. Peripheral pulmonary stenosis is also expected to be present in the remaining patients. The clinical features and the findings obtained at cardiac catheterization, angiocardiography and operation are discussed. Chromosome studies on 3 of these patients have been negative. It is suggested that defective formation of the aortic septum is responsible for the coexistence of peripheral stenosis in both great vessels. The malformation is characterized by hypoplasia of several organs. The findings represent a new syndrome: supravalvular aortic stenosis, peripheral pulmonary stenosis, mental retardation, a certain facial appearance and complex dental malformations.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Combining high biodiversity with high yields in tropical agroforests

Yann Clough; Jan Barkmann; Jana Juhrbandt; Michael Kessler; Thomas C. Wanger; Alam Anshary; Damayanti Buchori; Daniele Cicuzza; Kevin Darras; Dadang Dwi Putra; Stefan Erasmi; Ramadhanil Pitopang; Carsten Schmidt; Christian H. Schulze; Dominik Seidel; Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter; Kathrin Stenchly; Stefan Vidal; Maria Weist; Arno Wielgoss; Teja Tscharntke

Local and landscape-scale agricultural intensification is a major driver of global biodiversity loss. Controversially discussed solutions include wildlife-friendly farming or combining high-intensity farming with land-sparing for nature. Here, we integrate biodiversity and crop productivity data for smallholder cacao in Indonesia to exemplify for tropical agroforests that there is little relationship between yield and biodiversity under current management, opening substantial opportunities for wildlife-friendly management. Species richness of trees, fungi, invertebrates, and vertebrates did not decrease with yield. Moderate shade, adequate labor, and input level can be combined with a complex habitat structure to provide high biodiversity as well as high yields. Although livelihood impacts are held up as a major obstacle for wildlife-friendly farming in the tropics, our results suggest that in some situations, agroforests can be designed to optimize both biodiversity and crop production benefits without adding pressure to convert natural habitat to farmland.


Ecological Applications | 2009

Alpha and beta diversity of plants and animals along a tropical land-use gradient

Michael Kessler; Stefan Abrahamczyk; Merijn M. Bos; Damayanti Buchori; Dadang Dwi Putra; S. Robbert Gradstein; Patrick Höhn; Jürgen Kluge; Friederike Orend; Ramadhaniel Pitopang; Shahabuddin Saleh; Christian H. Schulze; Simone G. Sporn; Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter; Sri S. Tjitrosoedirdjo; Teja Tscharntke

Assessing the overall biological diversity of tropical rain forests is a seemingly insurmountable task for ecologists. Therefore, researchers frequently sample selected taxa that they believe reflect general biodiversity patterns. Usually, these studies focus on the congruence of alpha diversity (the number of species found per sampling unit) between taxa rather than on beta diversity (turnover of species assemblages between sampling units). Such approaches ignore the potential role of habitat heterogeneity that, depending on the taxonomic group considered, can greatly enhance beta diversity at local and landscape scales. We compared alpha and beta diversity of four plant groups (trees, lianas, terrestrial herbs, epiphytic liverworts) and eight animal groups (birds, butterflies, lower canopy ants, lower canopy beetles, dung beetles, bees, wasps, and the parasitoids of the latter two) at 15 sites in Sulawesi, Indonesia, that represented natural rain forest and three types of cacao agroforests differing in management intensity. In total, we recorded 863 species. Patterns of species richness per study site varied strongly between taxonomic groups. Only 13-17% of the variance in species richness of one taxonomic group could be predicted from the species richness of another, and on average 12-18% of the variance of beta diversity of a given group was predicted by that in other groups, although some taxon pairs had higher values (up to 76% for wasps and their parasitoids). The degree of congruence of patterns of alpha diversity was not influenced by sampling completeness, whereas the indicator value for beta diversity improved when using a similarity index that accounts for incomplete sampling. The indication potential of alpha diversity for beta diversity and vice versa was limited within taxa (7-20%) and virtually nil between them (0-4%). We conclude that different taxa can have largely independent patterns of alpha diversity and that patterns of beta diversity can be more congruent. Thus, conservation plans on a landscape scale need to put more emphasis on the high heterogeneity of agroforests and the overarching role of beta diversity shaping overall diversity patterns.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2005

Changes of dung beetle communities from rainforests towards agroforestry systems and annual cultures in Sulawesi (Indonesia)

Shahabuddin; Christian H. Schulze; Teja Tscharntke

Little is known about how tropical land-use systems contribute to the conservation of functionally important insect groups, including dung beetles. In a study at the margin of Lore Lindu National Park (a biodiversity hotspot in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia) dung-beetle communities were sampled in natural forest, young secondary forest, agroforestry systems (cacao plantations with shade trees) and annual cultures (maize fields), each with four replicates (n = 16 sites). At each site we used 10 pitfall traps, baited with cattle dung, along a 100 m transect for six 3-day periods. The number of trapped specimens and species richness at the natural forest sites was higher than in all land-use systems, which did not significantly differ. Each land-use system contained, on average, 75% of the species richness of the natural forest, thereby indicating their importance for conservation. However, a two-dimensional scaling plot based on NESS indices (m = 6) indicated distinct dung beetle communities for both forest types, while agroforestry systems and annual cultures exhibited a pronounced overlap. Mean body size of dung beetles was not significantly influenced by land-use intensity. Five of the six most abundant dung beetle species were recorded in all habitats, whereas the abundance of five other species was significantly related to habitat type. Mean local abundance and number of occupied sites were closely correlated, further indicating little habitat specialisation. The low dung beetle diversity (total of 18 recorded species) may be due to the absence of larger mammals in Sulawesi during historical times, even though Sulawesi is the largest island of Wallacea. In conclusion, the dung beetle fauna of the lower montane forest zone in Central Sulawesi appears to be relatively robust to man-made habitat changes and the majority of species did not exhibit strong habitat preferences.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Can joint carbon and biodiversity management in tropical agroforestry landscapes be optimized

Michael Kessler; Dietrich Hertel; Hermann F. Jungkunst; Jürgen Kluge; Stefan Abrahamczyk; Merijn M. Bos; Damayanti Buchori; Gerhard Gerold; S. Robbert Gradstein; Stefan Köhler; Christoph Leuschner; Gerald Moser; Ramadhanil Pitopang; Shahabuddin Saleh; Christian H. Schulze; Simone G. Sporn; Ingolf Steffan-Dewenter; Sri S. Tjitrosoedirdjo; Teja Tscharntke

Managing ecosystems for carbon storage may also benefit biodiversity conservation, but such a potential ‘win-win’ scenario has not yet been assessed for tropical agroforestry landscapes. We measured above- and below-ground carbon stocks as well as the species richness of four groups of plants and eight of animals on 14 representative plots in Sulawesi, Indonesia, ranging from natural rainforest to cacao agroforests that have replaced former natural forest. The conversion of natural forests with carbon stocks of 227–362 Mg C ha−1 to agroforests with 82–211 Mg C ha−1 showed no relationships to overall biodiversity but led to a significant loss of forest-related species richness. We conclude that the conservation of the forest-related biodiversity, and to a lesser degree of carbon stocks, mainly depends on the preservation of natural forest habitats. In the three most carbon-rich agroforestry systems, carbon stocks were about 60% of those of natural forest, suggesting that 1.6 ha of optimally managed agroforest can contribute to the conservation of carbon stocks as much as 1 ha of natural forest. However, agroforestry systems had comparatively low biodiversity, and we found no evidence for a tight link between carbon storage and biodiversity. Yet, potential win-win agroforestry management solutions include combining high shade-tree quality which favours biodiversity with cacao-yield adapted shade levels.


Journal of Tropical Ecology | 2010

Diversity and body size of dung beetles attracted to different dung types along a tropical land-use gradient in Sulawesi, Indonesia

Shahabuddin; Purnama Hidayat; Sjafrida Manuwoto; Woro A. Noerdjito; Teja Tscharntke; Christian H. Schulze

Dungbeetlesareafunctionallyimportantcomponentofmostterrestrialecosystems,butcommunitieschange with habitat disturbance and deforestation. In this study, we tested if dung beetle ensembles on dung of introduced cattleandoftheendemicanoa,asmallbuffalo,areaffecteddifferentiallybyhabitatdisturbance.Therefore,weexposed 10 pitfall traps, five baited with anoa and five baited with cattle dung, per site in six habitat types ranging from naturalandselectivelyloggedrainforesttothreetypesofagroforestrysystem(characterizedbydifferentmanagement intensity) and open areas (n = 4 replicate sites per habitat type) at the margin of Lore Lindu National Park, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. We found 28 species, 43% of which were endemic to Sulawesi. Species richness, abundance and biomass declined from natural forest towards open area. Large-bodied species appeared to be more sensitive to habitat disturbance and the ratio of large to small-sized dung beetles declined with land-use intensity. Although selectively logged forest and cocoa agroforestry systems had lower species richness compared with natural forest, they appearedtomaintainahighportionofspeciesoriginallyinhabitingforestsites.Thesimilarityofdungbeetleensembles recorded at forest and agroforestry sites reflects the high similarity of some habitat variables (e.g. vegetation structure and microclimate) between both habitat types compared with open areas. Species richness and abundances as well as species composition, which was characterized by decreases in mean body size, changed with land-use intensity, indicating that dung type is less important than habitat type for determining ensemble structure of these Indonesian dung beetles.


Bird Conservation International | 2012

Underground cabling and marking of power lines: conservation measures rapidly reduced mortality of West-Pannonian Great Bustards Otis tarda

Rainer Raab; Claudia Schütz; Péter Spakovszky; Eike Julius; Christian H. Schulze

Collisions with power lines represent an important mortality factor for Great Bustards Otis tarda throughout the distribution range of the species. This study evaluates the success of two conservation measures implemented in the West-Pannonian distribution range to reduce the number of power line collision casualties: (1) extensive underground cabling of 43.1 km power lines, and (2) marking of 89.7 km power lines starting in 2005 and 2006, respectively. The mortality rate of Great Bustards in our study area (covering 686.5 km 2 ) decreased significantly between 2002 and 2011, predominantly caused by reduced mortality due to power line collisions. Univariate tests indicate that underground cabling and power line marking significantly decreased power line collision casualties. Generalised linear models (GLMs) highlighted the prominent effect of underground cabling. Our results indicate that five years after underground cabling and marking of power lines within core areas of the West-Pannonian distribution range of the Great Bustard, the population already benefited through a significantly decreased mortality rate. Both conservation measures most likely contributed strongly to the rapid recovery of the West-Pannonian Great Bustard population observed within the last decade.


Clough, Y; Abrahamczyk, S; Adams, M O; et al; Cicuzza, D; Kessler, M (2010). Biodiversity patterns and trophic interactions in human-dominated tropical landscapes in Sulawesi (Indonesia): plants, arthropods and vertebrates. In: Tscharntke, T; et al. Tropical rainforests and agroforests under global change. Berlin: Springer, 15-71. | 2010

Biodiversity patterns and trophic interactions in human-dominated tropical landscapes in Sulawesi (Indonesia): plants, arthropods and vertebrates

Yann Clough; Stefan Abrahamczyk; Marc-Oliver Adams; Alam Anshary; Nunik Sri Ariyanti; Lydia Betz; Damayanti Buchori; Daniele Cicuzza; Kevin Darras; Dadang Dwi Putra; Brigitte Fiala; S. Robbert Gradstein; Michael Kessler; Alexandra-Maria Klein; Ramadhanil Pitopang; Bandung Sahari; Christoph Scherber; Christian H. Schulze; Shahabuddin; Simone G. Sporn; Kathrin Stenchly; Sri S. Tjitrosoedirdjo; Thomas C. Wanger; Maria Weist; Arno Wielgoss; Teja Tscharntke

The need to capture primary production in order to sustain and improve economic livelihoods has lead to increasing conversion of natural habitat and intensification of agricultural practices in many parts of the world including most tropical regions. Understanding how these processes affect ecosystems and their functioning, in particular in the high-diversity ecosystems of the tropics, has become a key issue in ecological research. In this chapter, our focus is on the agriculture-forest landscapes of Central Sulawesi, Indonesia, an island widely known for its endemic yet still poorly known flora and fauna. The rise of the region to one of the largest cacao producing areas in the world is at the core of recent land-use change and intensification processes. Covering plants (trees, rattan palms, herbs, bryophytes) and several invertebrate (ants, dung beetles, cacao insect herbivores, fruit-feeding butterflies, parasitic Hymenoptera, spiders) and vertebrate groups (amphibians, birds, murids, reptiles), we give an in-depth overview of the determinants of biodiversity in cacao landscapes, including both management and landscape-scale variables into our analyses. Results show that shaded agroforests host a rich community of species. By adopting a large-scale study design we showed that proximity of natural forest is a key predictor for species richness of plants, invertebrates and vertebrates alike. Endemics and forest specialists benefit most from indigenous shade tree cover and proximity to natural forest. Importantly, several functionally important groups such as insectivorous and seed-dispersing birds benefit from tall shade trees, shade tree diversity and proximity to forest edge, while parasitoid diversity is greatest close to natural forests. Available data on the effects of landuse change in cacao landscape of Central Sulawesi is increasing. Change in landscape configuration and management practices are being clearly reflected in the composition of species communities, with likely impacts on ecosystem services such as pest control and pollination. More knowledge is needed especially in terms of species interactions and ecosystem functioning, but also on how existing knowledge can contribute to effective conservation in human-dominated landscapes outside protected areas.


Ecology and Evolution | 2015

Functional diversity of urban bird communities: effects of landscape composition, green space area and vegetation cover.

Claudia Schütz; Christian H. Schulze

Abstract In this study, we aim to gain a better insight on how habitat filtering due to urbanization shapes bird communities of Vienna city parks. This may help to derive implications for urban planning in order to promote and maintain high diversity and ecosystem function in an increasing urbanized environment. The structure of wintering bird communities of 36 Vienna city parks – surveyed once a month in January 2009, December 2009, December 2012, and January 2013 – was described by species richness and the functional diversity measurements FRic (functional richness), FEve (functional evenness), and FDiv (functional divergence). Environmental filtering was quantified by park size, canopy heterogeneity within the park, and the proportion of sealed area surrounding each park. Species richness, FRic, and FDiv increased with increasing park size. Sealed area had a strong negative effect on species richness and FDiv. Canopy heterogeneity played a minor role in explaining variance in FDiv data. FEve did not respond to any of these park parameters. Our results suggest a loss of species richness and functional diversity, hence most likely indicate a decline in ecosystem function, with decreasing park size and increasing sealed area of the surrounding urban landscape matrix.

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Damayanti Buchori

Bogor Agricultural University

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Merijn M. Bos

University of Göttingen

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