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. 2016 Sep 19;371(1703):20150305. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2015.0305

Figure 2.

Figure 2.

Figure 2.

Images of different Asian savannahs with numbers on the images corresponding to the numbered geographical locations shown in figure 1. (1) Fine-leafed and spiny Acacia savannah in Gujarat, western India. (2) Broadleaf Anogeissus–Terminalia savannah in Mudumalai, southern India. (3) Broadleaf Anogeissus savannah in Nagarjuna-Sagar in south-eastern India. (4) Broadleaf Dipterocarp savannah in Pa Hin Ngam, Thailand and (5) Broadleaf Dipterocarp savannah underlain by the deciduous bamboo Vietnamosasa spp. in Mondulkiri, Cambodia. (6) Mixed broadleaf savannah in Yuanjiang Valley savannah, Yunnan, China. (7) Pine savannah (Pinus kesiya) on Mt Ugo, The Philippines. (8) Eucalypt savannah (Eucalyptus alba) on Mount Curi, East Timor, The Lesser Sunda islands. (9) Fine-leafed and spiny Acacia savannah on Mount Manatuto, East Timor, The Lesser Sunda islands. (10) Fine-leafed and spiny savannah in Sariska Tiger Reserve, central India and (11) pine savannah (Pinus roxburghii) in the Himalayan foothills in Dehradun, north India. Photo credits: Jayashree Ratnam, Edmund February, Mahesh Sankaran, Komsant Inroung (http://lifexdiscovery.blogspot.in), Kyle Tomlinson, Don Franklin, Anne Jimenez (Wikimedia Commons).