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The evolution of increased competitive ability (EICA) hypothesis proposes that exotic plants often become invasive because they have evolved reduced a...
Read moreThe source of seed or plant material can have profound implications for the success of restoration efforts because most species exhibit adaptive genet...
Read moreA low input approach to the establishment of vegetation on mine and coal ash wastes is illustrated by application to a pulverized fuel ash (PFA) dam i...
Read moreAlthough ecological restoration has entered the global agenda to reverse different anthropogenic disturbances, we still know little about how this sol...
Read moreResins are highly valued non-timber forest products (NTFP). One of the most widely traded resins is frankincense, tapped from several Boswellia tree s...
Read moreSeed-based ecosystem restoration has huge potential to restore degraded drylands. However, fewer than 10% of directly sown seeds transition to establi...
Read moreIn order to develop an effective biological control technique, the influence of mechanical and pathogen treatments on performance and nutrient storage...
Read moreTree encroachment into herbaceous and shrub communities is a common phenomenon world-wide. Encroachment of the tree Allocasuarina huegeliana in sandpl...
Read moreThe establishment success of non-native invasive species is often attributable either to habitat invasibility or inherent species traits. In this stud...
Read moreSpecialist seed-feeders are widely used in weed biological control, but seed predation rates are frequently insufficient to cause the required impacts...
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