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Aquatic invasive species (AIS) are a leading cause of global loss of biodiversity. However, the relationships between AIS and vulnerable species (e.g....
Read moreSpillover of beneficial organisms from natural habitats to croplands can improve agro-ecosystem services, but wildlife can also negatively influence a...
Read moreFunctional responses in habitat selection occur when individuals adjust their selection of habitat features as a function of the availability of those...
Read moreUnderstanding the mechanisms that allow exotic species to have rapid population growth is an important step in the process of controlling existing inv...
Read moreEarly establishment and sapling growth is a key phase in ensuring cost-effective reforestation success in relation to biodiversity outcomes. Therefore...
Read moreMorphological characteristics of Salix borealis [S. myrsinifolia] were monitored during 1994-96 at 10 sites along a transect crossing the heavily poll...
Read moreRemediation of lands devastated by industry includes various forms of restoration, such as technical reclamation and spontaneous succession. These man...
Read moreenThis link goes to a English sectionzhThis link goes to a English section The intercropping approach of Eucalyptus and native trees has been widely r...
Read moreAnthropogenically driven environmental changes over recent centuries have led to severe declines of wildlife populations. Better tools are needed to a...
Read moreFrom sections cut from stems of 10 P. taeda trees on a moderately deep, well drained sandy loam in Duke Forest, N. Carolina, the annual above-ground v...
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