Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 22
pro vyhledávání: '"Donald J. Padgett"'
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Botany. 109:1508-1514
Effective seed dispersal is essential to the success of plant species. Swida amomum (silky dogwood) has a seed-dispersal syndrome characteristic of autumn-ripening shrubs with fleshy fruits; attached fruits are ingested and defecated by birds, while
Publikováno v:
Rhodora. 124
Publikováno v:
Rhodora. 123
Publikováno v:
Aquatic Botany. 149:40-45
Direct or incidental ingestion of fruits or seeds by freshwater turtles can facilitate seed dispersal within and between bodies of water. Here, we evaluate Chrysemys picta (Eastern painted turtles) as a dispersal mode for hydrophytes and aimed to det
Padgett, Donald J., Quirk, Sydney, Joyal, Meghan, Surasinghe, Thilina D. (2019): Egestion of plant propagules by turtles in a small Massachusetts river. Journal of Natural History 53 (31): 2011-2021, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2019.1681531
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::273561e0d50122bbc0ccc74082dbbc38
https://zenodo.org/record/3663002
https://zenodo.org/record/3663002
Publikováno v:
Rhodora. 121:213
Publikováno v:
Northeastern Naturalist. 17:305-312
Animals facilitate macrophyte seed dispersal in various ways despite spe- cializations of macrophytes for water dispersal. Previous diet analyses of freshwater aquatic turtles revealed that several North American turtle species consume a variety and
Publikováno v:
Systematic Botany. 33:598-612
Menyanthaceae consist of five genera of aquatic and wetland plants distributed worldwide. The three monotypic genera (Liparophyllum, Menyanthes, and Nephrophyllidium) are clearly differentiated morphologically, but the two larger genera (Nymphoides a
Autor:
Donald J. Padgett
Publikováno v:
Rhodora. 109:1-95
The genus Nuphar (Nymphaeaceae) is described to include 11 species native to fresh waters of the Northern Hemisphere. This assessment utilized morphometric analyses, cladistic analyses, evaluation of randomly amplified polymorphic DNA, and seed and p
Publikováno v:
Northeastern Naturalist. 11:49-56
Cardamine longii (Brassicaceae), long's bittercress, is an imperiled plant confined largely to freshwater tidal marshes of the eastern U.S. To better understand possible causes of rarity in the species, its reproductive output was studied in two sout