Avian Use of Rural Roadsides with Cattail (Typha spp.)
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چکیده
منابع مشابه
Effectiveness of cattail (Typha spp.) management techniques depends on exogenous nitrogen inputs
Copyright ©2017 Kenneth J. Elgersma, Jason P. Martina, Deborah E. Goldberg, and William S. Currie. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.uni.e...
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Many wetlands of the Great Lakes region are increasingly dominated by species of cattails, including the native Typha latifolia, the introduced Typha angustifolia, and their hybrid Typha glauca. Cattails are observed to form dense stands of live and dead biomass that may reduce plant diversity and compromise wetland habitat value. Cattail expansion has been used as an indicator of environmental...
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Wetlands in the Prairie Pothole Region of North America are integrated with farmland and contain mixtures of herbicide contaminants. Passive nonfacilitated diffusion is how most herbicides can move across plant membranes, making this perhaps an important process by which herbicide contaminants are absorbed by wetland vegetation. Prairie wetlands are dominated by native cattail (Typha latifolia)...
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Sediments from Cheboygan Marsh, a coastal freshwater wetland on Lake Huron that has been invaded by an emergent exotic plant, Typha glauca, were examined to assess the effects of invasion on wetland nutrient levels and sediment microbial communities. Comparison of invaded and uninvaded zones of the marsh indicated that the invaded zone showed significantly lower plant diversity, as well as sign...
متن کاملNo evidence for niche segregation in a North American Cattail (Typha) species complex
Interspecific hybridization can lead to a breakdown of species boundaries, and is of particular concern in cases in which one of the parental species is invasive. Cattails (Typha spp.) have increased their abundance in the Great Lakes region of North America over the past 150 years. This increase in the distribution of cattails is associated with hybridization between broad-leaved (Typha latifo...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: The American Midland Naturalist
سال: 2008
ISSN: 0003-0031,1938-4238
DOI: 10.1674/0003-0031(2008)159[162:auorrw]2.0.co;2