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Comparative Plant Ecology: A Functional Approach to Common British Species
J. P. Grime,John G. Hodgson,Roderick Hunt +2 more
- 31 Dec 1989
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About: The article was published on 31 Dec 1989. and is currently open access. The article focuses on the topics: Ecology (disciplines) & Flora.
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Citations
Seedling resistance to herbivory as a predictor of relative abundance in a synthesised prairie community
TL;DR: The hypothesis that resistance to herbivory may be an important component of plant fitness in unproductive vegetation is supported and the correlation between palatability and community composition may be interpreted as a positive association between traits that lead to high competitive ability and herbivorous resistance.
Dynamic trajectories of growth and nitrogen capture by competing plants
TL;DR: Biomass and N capture trajectories demonstrated that competitive outcomes depend crucially on when and how 'competition' is measured, which potentially compromises the interpretation of conventional competition experiments.
56
Arabidopsis halleri: a perennial model system for studying population differentiation and local adaptation.
Mie N. Honjo,Hiroshi Kudoh +1 more
TL;DR: Arabidopsis halleri is introduced and its life history as a perennial model system to study population differentiation and local adaptation and how RNA-Seq can broaden phenotypic space and serve as a link to underlying mechanisms is discussed.
Ecological correlations between the persistence of the soil seed bank and several plant traits, including seed dormancy
TL;DR: It was empirically showed that seed size and life history correlate with the formation of a soil seed bank, and dormancy was not essential for the formation and persistence of a seed bank.
56
Propagule input, transport and deposition in riparian environments: the importance of connectivity for diversity
TL;DR: In this article, the quantity and species composition of deposited propagules reflect the riparian vegetation, represent new species that are not present in the vegetation, and vary with river flow and season.
56
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