1. Benzing, D.H., 1998. Vulnerabilities of tropical forests to climate change: the significance of resident epiphytes. Clim. Change 39, 519–5440.
  2. Bubb, P., May, I., Miles, L. , & J. Sayer. 2004. Cloud Forest Agenda. United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), World Monitoring Center.
  3. Bush, M., Silman, M., and Urrego, D. 48,000 years of climate change in a biodiversity hotspot. Science 303, 827-289.
  4. Byer, M.D., Weaver, P.L., 1977. Early secondary succession in an elfin woodland in the Luquillo mountains of Puerto Rico. Biotropica 9, 35–47.
  5. Diaz, H.F., Graham, N.E., 1996. Recent changes in tropical freezing heights and the role of sea surface temperature. Nature 383, 152–155.
  6. Donnelly, M.A., Crump, M.L., 1998. Potential effects of climate change on two neotropical amphibian assemblages. Clim. Change 39, 541–561.
  7. Foster, Pru. 2001. The potential negative impacts of global climate change on tropical montane cloud forests. Earth-Science Reviews 55, 73-106.
  8. Fowler, A.M., Hennessy, K.J., 1995. Potential impacts of global warming on the frequency and magnitude of heavy precipitation. Nat. Hazards 11, 283–303.
  9. Gentry, A.H., 1992. Tropical forest biodiversity: distributional patterns and their conservational significance. Oikos 63, 19–28.
  10. Hostettler, S. 2002. Tropical montane cloud forests: A challenge for conservation. Bois-et-Forets-des-Tropiques, 274: 19-30.
  11. Hulme, M., Viner, D., 1998. A climate change scenario for the tropics. Clim. Change 39, 145–176.
  12. Ko ¨ rner, C., 1994. Impact of atmospheric changes on high mountain. In: Mountain Environments in Changing Climates. Beniston, M. Ed. Routledge, London, pp. 167–179.
  13. Lawton , R.O. 2001. Climatic impact of tropical lowland deforestation on nearby montane cloud forests. Science, 294: 584-.
  14. Leo, M., 1995. The importance of tropical montane cloud forest for preserving vertebrate endemism in Peru: the Rio Abiseco National Park as a case study. In: Hamilton, L.S., Juvik, J.O., Scatena, F.N. Ž Eds., Tropical Montane Cloud Forests: Proceedings of an International Symposium. Springer-Verlag, New York, pp. 198–205.
  15. Myers, N., 1991. Tropical forests: present status and future outlook. Clim. Change 19, 3–32.
  16. Nadkarni, M. and R. Solano. 2002. Potential effects of climate change on canopy communities in a tropical cloud forest: An experimental approach. Oecologia 131: 580-586.
  17. Pounds, A., Fogden, M., and J. Campbell.1999. Biological response to climate change on a tropical mountain. Nature 398:611-615.
  18. Still, C., Foster, P.N., Schneider, S.H., 1999. Simulating the effects of climate change on troical montane cloud forests. Nature 398, 608–610.
  19. Tennesen, Michael. 2006. Uphill battle: as the climate warms in the cloud forests of the Andes, plants and animals must climb to higher, cooler elevations or die. Smithsonian 37 78-.
  20. Vazquez-Garcia, J.A., 1995. Cloud forest archipelagos: preservation of fragmented montane ecosystems in tropical America. In: Hamilton, L.S., Juvik, J.O., Scatena, F.N. Ž Eds . , Tropical Montane Cloud Forests: Proceedings of an International Symposium. Springer-Verlag, New York, pp. 315–332.
  21. Whitmore, T.C., 1989. Tropical forest nutrients, where do we stand? A tour de horizon. In: Proctor, J. Ed . , Mineral Nutrients in Tropical Forest and Savanna Ecosystems. Blackwell Scientific, Oxford, pp. 1–13.