158 results on '"Pauchard, Anibal"'
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2. Exploring the multifunctional landscapes model in areas dominated by non-native tree plantations
3. Control of invasive conifers in temperate Andean forests promotes native vegetation restoration, but requires continuous management
4. Mapping alien and native forest dynamics in Chile using Earth observation time series analysis
5. Plant Invasions in South America
6. Moving Toward Global Strategies for Managing Invasive Alien Species
7. Predicting the impact of invasive trees from different measures of abundance
8. Should tree invasions be used in treeless ecosystems to mitigate climate change?
9. Roadside disturbance promotes plant communities with arbuscular mycorrhizal associations in mountain regions worldwide
10. Genetic analyses reveal complex introduction histories for the invasive tree Acacia dealbata Link around the world
11. Early Control of Invasive Conifers in Temperate Forests Promotes Natural Recovery of Native Vegetation But Requires Continuous Management
12. Native and non-native trees can find compatible mycorrhizal partners in each other’s dominated areas
13. A multi-decadal geochemical record from Rano Aroi (Easter Island/Rapa Nui): Implications for the environment, climate and humans during the last two millennia
14. Distinct Biogeographic Phenomena Require a Specific Terminology : A Reply to Wilson and Sagoff
15. Alternative futures for global biological invasions
16. A Conceptual Framework for Range-Expanding Species that Track Human-Induced Environmental Change
17. Non-native Pines Are Homogenizing the Ecosystems of South America
18. From Biocultural Homogenization to Biocultural Conservation: A Conceptual Framework to Reorient Society Toward Sustainability of Life
19. Invasion Science and the Global Spread of SARS-CoV-2
20. Do people care about pine invasions? Visitor perceptions and willingness to pay for pine control in a protected area
21. Towards integrating and standardising information on plant invasions across Australia
22. Roadside disturbance promotes arbuscular mycorrhizal communities in mountain regions worldwide
23. Mountain roads and non-native species modify elevational patterns of plant diversity
24. Including a diverse set of voices to address biological invasions
25. Running off the road: roadside non-native plants invading mountain vegetation
26. Comparing Alien Plant Invasions among Regions with Similar Climates: Where to from Here?
27. Influence of Elevation, Land Use, and Landscape Context on Patterns of Alien Plant Invasions along Roadsides in Protected Areas of South-Central Chile
28. Pinus contorta invasions increase wildfire fuel loads and may create a positive feedback with fire
29. Disturbance is the key to plant invasions in cold environments
30. Linking the impacts of plant invasion on community functional structure and ecosystem properties
31. Exotic seaweed in the Chilean coast: spatial and temporal patterns in the invasion process/Macroalgas exoticas en la costa de Chile: patrones espaciales y temporales en el proceso de invasion
32. Is Observation-Based Ecology Scientific?
33. Opening Nature’s Door to a New Generation of Citizens and Ecologists
34. Ecology’s Renewed Importance in Policy
35. Conclusions
36. Dealing with Too Many Observations, and Too Few
37. Using Technology to Expand Our Observational Senses
38. Local, Traditional, and Accidental Ecological Observers and Observations
39. Using All the Senses in Ecology
40. Observational Approaches in Historical Context
41. An Observational Approach to Ecology
42. Introduction : A Time of Change and Adaptation in Ecology
43. DIGGING DEEPER – HOW SOIL BIOTA DRIVE AND RESPOND TO PLANT INVASIONS: Differences in endophyte communities of introduced trees depend on the phylogenetic relatedness of the receiving forest
44. Native versus non-native invasions: similarities and differences in the biodiversity impacts of Pinus contorta in introduced and native ranges
45. Drivers of plant invasion vary globally: evidence from pine invasions within six ecoregions
46. Policy-Oriented Research in Invasion Science: Trends, Status, Gaps, and Lessons
47. Challenging the view that invasive non-native plants are not a significant threat to the floristic diversity of Great Britain
48. A single ectomycorrhizal fungal species can enable a Pinus invasion
49. Reply to Proença et al. : Sown biodiverse pastures are not a universal solution to invasion risk
50. Alien Plants Homogenise Protected Areas: Evidence from the Landscape and Regional Scales in South Central Chile
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