Pages that link to "Q43228106"
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The following pages link to Aníbal Pauchard (Q43228106):
Displaying 50 items.
- A single ectomycorrhizal fungal species can enable a Pinus invasion (Q28265785) (← links)
- Disturbance is the key to plant invasions in cold environments (Q31143810) (← links)
- Assembly of nonnative floras along elevational gradients explained by directional ecological filtering (Q34490846) (← links)
- New pasture plants intensify invasive species risk (Q34581250) (← links)
- Global Invader Impact Network (GIIN): toward standardized evaluation of the ecological impacts of invasive plants (Q35755013) (← links)
- Pine invasions in treeless environments: dispersal overruns microsite heterogeneity (Q35914273) (← links)
- Pinus contorta invasions increase wildfire fuel loads and may create a positive feedback with fire (Q36217440) (← links)
- Natives and non-natives plants show different responses to elevation and disturbance on the tropical high Andes of Ecuador. (Q42372689) (← links)
- Challenging the view that invasive non-native plants are not a significant threat to the floristic diversity of Great Britain (Q42437832) (← links)
- Reply to Proença et al.: Sown biodiverse pastures are not a universal solution to invasion risk (Q43228007) (← links)
- Lags in the response of mountain plant communities to climate change (Q46266731) (← links)
- Invasion Science in the Developing World: A Response to Ricciardi et al. (Q46312695) (← links)
- Influence of Elevation, Land Use, and Landscape Context on Patterns of Alien Plant Invasions along Roadsides in Protected Areas of South-Central Chile (Q55870364) (← links)
- Increasing the Understanding of Plant Invasions in Southern South America: First Symposium on Alien Plant Invasions in Chile (Q55870506) (← links)
- Mountain roads shift native and non-native plant species' ranges (Q56334584) (← links)
- Linking the impacts of plant invasion on community functional structure and ecosystem properties (Q56379345) (← links)
- Differences in endophyte communities of introduced trees depend on the phylogenetic relatedness of the receiving forest (Q56383151) (← links)
- Pinus contorta invasion into treeless steppe reduces species richness and alters species traits of the local community (Q56388269) (← links)
- Native versus non-native invasions: similarities and differences in the biodiversity impacts ofPinus contortain introduced and native ranges (Q56402822) (← links)
- Non-native and native organisms moving into high elevation and high latitude ecosystems in an era of climate change: new challenges for ecology and conservation (Q56418774) (← links)
- Drivers of plant invasion vary globally: evidence from pine invasions within six ecoregions (Q56422310) (← links)
- Struggling to maintain native plant diversity in a peri-urban reserve surrounded by a highly anthropogenic matrix (Q56426340) (← links)
- What can possibly go wrong?: The risks of introducing soil microorganisms from Antarctica into South America (Q56440786) (← links)
- Efecto de la alta temperatura en la germinación y supervivencia de semillas de la especie invasora Pinus contorta y dos especies nativas del sur de Chile (Q56441386) (← links)
- Agricultural Weed Research: A Critique and Two Proposals (Q56447170) (← links)
- Tree invasions: patterns, processes, challenges and opportunities (Q56453237) (← links)
- Unlocking the potential of Google Earth as a tool in invasion science (Q56453255) (← links)
- A standardized set of metrics to assess and monitor tree invasions (Q56453258) (← links)
- Can model species be used to advance the field of invasion ecology? (Q56453267) (← links)
- French broom (Teline monspessulana) invasion in south-central Chile depends on factors operating at different spatial scales (Q56459499) (← links)
- A new comprehensive database of alien plant species in Chile based on herbarium records (Q56512813) (← links)
- Processes at multiple scales affect richness and similarity of non-native plant species in mountains around the world (Q56579515) (← links)
- Assessing the importance of disturbance, site conditions, and the biotic barrier for dandelion invasion in an Alpine habitat (Q56648910) (← links)
- Plant Invasions in Mountains: Global Lessons for Better Management (Q56687230) (← links)
- Widespread plant species: natives versus aliens in our changing world (Q56743879) (← links)
- Adoption, use and perception of Australian acacias around the world (Q56744565) (← links)
- Impacts of invasive Australian acacias: implications for management and restoration (Q56744750) (← links)
- Ecology and management of invasive Pinaceae around the world: progress and challenges (Q56752112) (← links)
- Survival and growth of Acacia dealbata vs. native trees across an invasion front in south-central Chile (Q56763738) (← links)
- Alien flora of mountains: global comparisons for the development of local preventive measures against plant invasions (Q56764998) (← links)
- Pinus contorta invasion in the Chilean Patagonia: local patterns in a global context (Q56765595) (← links)
- Spread and impact of introduced conifers in South America: Lessons from other southern hemisphere regions (Q56766881) (← links)
- Biological invasions in developing and developed countries: does one model fit all? (Q56768037) (← links)
- Ain't no mountain high enough: plant invasions reaching new elevations (Q56770082) (← links)
- Patterns of spread of Pinus contorta Dougl. ex Loud. invasion in a Natural Reserve in southern South America (Q56773904) (← links)
- Positive feedbacks between plant invasions and fire regimes: Teline monspessulana (L.) K. Koch (Fabaceae) in central Chile (Q56774908) (← links)
- Do climatically similar regions contain similar alien floras? A comparison between the mediterranean areas of central Chile and California (Q56775035) (← links)
- Integrating the Study of Non-native Plant Invasions across Spatial Scales (Q56781139) (← links)
- Edge type defines alien plant species invasions along Pinus contorta burned, highway and clearcut forest edges (Q56781498) (← links)
- Multiple effects of urbanization on the biodiversity of developing countries: The case of a fast-growing metropolitan area (Concepción, Chile) (Q56781800) (← links)