Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Kerry Bohl Stricker"'
Autor:
Keith Clay, S. Luke Flory, Kerry Bohl Stricker, Ashish Adhikari, Erica M. Goss, Brett Lane, Matthew E. Smith, Philip F. Harmon, Marina S. Ascunce
Publikováno v:
Mycologia. 112:921-931
Environmentally damaging invasive plants can also serve as reservoir hosts for agricultural pathogens. Microstegium vimineum is an invasive C4 annual grass that is present throughout the midwestern and eastern United States. It can reach high densiti
Autor:
Brett, Lane, Kerry Bohl, Stricker, Ashish, Adhikari, Marina S, Ascunce, Keith, Clay, S Luke, Flory, Matthew E, Smith, Erica M, Goss, Philip F, Harmon
Publikováno v:
Mycologia. 112(5)
Environmentally damaging invasive plants can also serve as reservoir hosts for agricultural pathogens.
Autor:
Kerry Bohl Stricker, Peter Stiling
Publikováno v:
Oecologia. 174:817-826
One of the most commonly cited hypotheses explaining invasion success is the enemy release hypothesis (ERH), which maintains that populations are regulated by coevolved natural enemies where they are native but are relieved of this pressure in the ne
Publikováno v:
Ecology letters. 19(4)
Emerging pathogens are a growing threat to human health, agriculture and the diversity of ecological communities but may also help control problematic species. Here we investigated the diversity, distribution and consequences of emerging fungal patho
Publikováno v:
AoB Plants
Here the authors review the research methods used to measure the ecological effects of non-native plant invasions. In their synthesis they find that although the number of studies on invasion impacts has increased markedly in recent years, there is a
Autor:
Peter Stiling, Kerry Bohl Stricker
Publikováno v:
Ecology. 93(8)
The enemy release hypothesis (ERH) is often cited to explain why some plants successfully invade natural communities while others do not. This hypothesis maintains that plant populations are regulated by coevolved enemies in their native range but ar