135 results on '"TECCO, PAULA A."'
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2. Online herbaria databases allow testing the minimum residence time among invasive and non-invasive alien species
3. Argentina's rejection of 2030 agenda undermines environmental sustainability and human well-being
4. Towards the construction of a seed traits database for restoration of subtropical seasonally dry ecosystems: Effects of light, temperature and seed storage on germination
5. Going up the Andes: patterns and drivers of non-native plant invasions across latitudinal and elevational gradients
6. Is intraspecific variability an advantage in mountain invasions? Comparing functional trait variation in an invasive and a native woody species along multiple environmental gradients
7. Functional stability of mycorrhizal interactions in woody natives and aliens facing fire disturbance
8. Latitudinal Distribution of Mycorrhizal Types in Native and Alien Trees in Montane Ecosystems from Southern South America
9. Reciprocal interactions between a non-native shrub and the dominant native trees of a high mountain woodland: who benefits?
10. Correction to: A review of fire effects across South American ecosystems: the role of climate and time since fire
11. A review of fire effects across South American ecosystems: the role of climate and time since fire
12. Can arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi from non-invaded montane ecosystems facilitate the growth of alien trees?
13. Changes in floristic composition and physiognomy are decoupled along elevation gradients in central Argentina
14. Co-invasive exotic pines and their ectomycorrhizal symbionts show capabilities for wide distance and altitudinal range expansion
15. Seed dispersal of a fleshy‐fruited invasive shrub is affected by changes in the frugivorous bird assemblage along an elevational gradient.
16. Distribución de una leñosa exótica invasora en un sistema de montaña ¿ocupan Cotoneaster franchetii y la leñosa nativa Polylepis australis (Rosaceae) hábitats similares?
17. Can livestock grazing maintain landscape diversity and stability in an ecosystem that evolved with wild herbivores?
18. The importance of native and exotic plant identity and dominance on decomposition patterns in mountain woodlands of central Argentina
19. Functional Diversity — at the Crossroads between Ecosystem Functioning and Environmental Filters
20. Functional Traits of Alien Plants across Contrasting Climatic and Land-Use Regimes: Do Aliens Join the Locals or Try Harder than Them?
21. Correction to:A review of fire effects across South American ecosystems: the role of climate and time since fire (Fire Ecology, (2021), 17, 1, (11), 10.1186/s42408-021-00100-9)
22. DISTRIBUCIÓN DE UNA LEÑOSA EXÓTICA INVASORA EN UN SISTEMA DE MONTAÑA ¿OCUPAN COTONEASTER FRANCHETII Y LA LEÑOSA NATIVA POLYLEPIS AUSTRALIS (ROSACEAE) HÁBITATS SIMILARES?
23. Variación de los caracteres foliares en comunidades vegetales del centro de la Argentina bajo diferentes condiciones climáticas y de uso del suelo
24. Factors associated with woody alien species distribution in a newly invaded mountain system of central Argentina
25. Invasion of glossy privet (Ligustrum lucidum) and native forest loss in the Sierras Chicas of Córdoba, Argentina
26. Fleshy‐fruited invasive shrubs indirectly increase native tree seed dispersal
27. Response to Vergara et al. (2015)—Fruiting phenology as a “triggering attribute” of invasion process: Do invasive species take advantage of seed dispersal service provided by native birds?
28. Figure 1 from: Zeballos SR, Cabido MR, Cantero JJ, Acosta ATR, Palchetti MV, Argarañaz J, Marcora PI, Tecco PA, Ferreras A, Funes G, Vaieretti VM, Conti G, Giorgis MA (2021) Floristic patterns of the neotropical forests, savannas and scrublands with Trithrinax campestris (Arecaceae) in central Argentina. Vegetation Classification and Survey 2: 5-18. https://doi.org/10.3897/VCS/2021/59384
29. Figure 4 from: Zeballos SR, Cabido MR, Cantero JJ, Acosta ATR, Palchetti MV, Argarañaz J, Marcora PI, Tecco PA, Ferreras A, Funes G, Vaieretti VM, Conti G, Giorgis MA (2021) Floristic patterns of the neotropical forests, savannas and scrublands with Trithrinax campestris (Arecaceae) in central Argentina. Vegetation Classification and Survey 2: 5-18. https://doi.org/10.3897/VCS/2021/59384
30. Figure 2 from: Zeballos SR, Cabido MR, Cantero JJ, Acosta ATR, Palchetti MV, Argarañaz J, Marcora PI, Tecco PA, Ferreras A, Funes G, Vaieretti VM, Conti G, Giorgis MA (2021) Floristic patterns of the neotropical forests, savannas and scrublands with Trithrinax campestris (Arecaceae) in central Argentina. Vegetation Classification and Survey 2: 5-18. https://doi.org/10.3897/VCS/2021/59384
31. Floristic patterns of the neotropical forests, savannas and scrublands with Trithrinax campestris (Arecaceae) in central Argentina
32. Supplementary material 1 from: Zeballos SR, Cabido MR, Cantero JJ, Acosta ATR, Palchetti MV, Argarañaz J, Marcora PI, Tecco PA, Ferreras A, Funes G, Vaieretti VM, Conti G, Giorgis MA (2021) Floristic patterns of the neotropical forests, savannas and scrublands with Trithrinax campestris (Arecaceae) in central Argentina. Vegetation Classification and Survey 2: 5-18. https://doi.org/10.3897/VCS/2021/59384
33. Figure 3 from: Zeballos SR, Cabido MR, Cantero JJ, Acosta ATR, Palchetti MV, Argarañaz J, Marcora PI, Tecco PA, Ferreras A, Funes G, Vaieretti VM, Conti G, Giorgis MA (2021) Floristic patterns of the neotropical forests, savannas and scrublands with Trithrinax campestris (Arecaceae) in central Argentina. Vegetation Classification and Survey 2: 5-18. https://doi.org/10.3897/VCS/2021/59384
34. Are populations of Polylepis australis locally adapted along their elevation gradient?
35. Reciprocal interactions between a non-native shrub and the dominant native trees of a high mountain woodland: who benefits?
36. Functional Diversity — at the Crossroads between Ecosystem Functioning and Environmental Filters
37. Fleshy‐fruited invasive shrubs indirectly increase native tree seed dispersal.
38. Post-burning germination responses of woody invaders in a fire-prone ecosystem
39. Latitudinal distribution of mycorrhizal types in native and alien trees in montane ecosystems from southern south America
40. Are populations of Polylepis australis locally adapted along their elevation gradient?
41. Variación en la efectividad de la dispersión de semillas del arbusto invasor Cotoneaster franchetii en un gradiente altitudinal
42. Post‐burning germination responses of woody invaders in a fire‐prone ecosystem
43. Environmental constraints to native woody species recruitment in invaded mountain woodlands of central Argentina
44. Overcoming lag phase: do regenerative attributes onset Acacia dealbata spread in a newly invaded system?
45. Can arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi from non-invaded montane ecosystems facilitate the growth of alien trees?
46. Influence of altitude on local adaptation in upland tree species from central Argentina
47. Composición de especies leñosas en comunidades invadidas en montañas del centro de Argentina: su relación con factores ambientales locales
48. Woody species composition in invaded communities from mountains of central Argentina: their relations with local environmental factors
49. Árboles y arbustos invasores de la Provincia de Córdoba (Argentina): Una contribución a la sistematización de bases de datos globales
50. Efecto de la temperatura en la regeneración de especies leñosas del Chaco Serrano e implicancias en la distribución actual y potencial de bosques
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