Some plants like it warmer: Increased growth of three selected invasive plant species in soils with a history of experimental warming
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] R Core Team,et al. R: A language and environment for statistical computing. , 2014 .
[2] W. H. van der Putten,et al. Soil biotic legacy effects of extreme weather events influence plant invasiveness , 2013, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[3] T. Crowther,et al. Thermal acclimation in widespread heterotrophic soil microbes. , 2013, Ecology letters.
[4] C. van Dooremalen,et al. Acclimation responses to temperature vary with vertical stratification: implications for vulnerability of soil‐dwelling species to extreme temperature events , 2013, Global change biology.
[5] Effects of experimental climate warming and associated soil drought on the competition between three highly invasive West European alien plant species and native counterparts , 2012, Plant Ecology.
[6] Anja Rammig,et al. A plant's perspective of extremes: terrestrial plant responses to changing climatic variability , 2013, Global change biology.
[7] P. Reich,et al. Interactive effects of global warming and ‘global worming’ on the initial establishment of native and exotic herbaceous plant species , 2012 .
[8] P. Reich,et al. Above- and below-ground plant inputs both fuel soil food webs , 2012 .
[9] R. Zeng,et al. Elevated temperature may accelerate invasive expansion of the liana plant Ipomoea cairica , 2011 .
[10] R. Corlett,et al. Impacts of warming on tropical lowland rainforests. , 2011, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[11] J. Melillo,et al. Soil warming alters nitrogen cycling in a New England forest: implications for ecosystem function and structure , 2011, Oecologia.
[12] Jianyang Xia,et al. Climate warming and biomass accumulation of terrestrial plants: a meta-analysis. , 2010, The New phytologist.
[13] D. Wardle,et al. Aboveground-Belowground Linkages: Biotic Interactions, Ecosystem Processes, and Global Change , 2010 .
[14] Ram Oren,et al. Differential responses to changes in growth temperature between trees from different functional groups and biomes: a review and synthesis of data. , 2010, Tree physiology.
[15] J. Dukes,et al. Effects of warming and altered precipitation on plant and nutrient dynamics of a New England salt marsh. , 2009, Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America.
[16] S. Scheu,et al. Earthworms as drivers of the competition between grasses and legumes , 2008 .
[17] N. Buchmann,et al. Positive interactions between nitrogen-fixing legumes and four different neighbouring species in a biodiversity experiment , 2007, Oecologia.
[18] J. Cornelissen,et al. Plant Performance in a Warmer World: General Responses of Plants from Cold, Northern Biomes and the Importance of Winter and Spring Events , 2006, Plant Ecology.
[19] T. Seastedt,et al. Competitive impacts and responses of an invasive weed: dependencies on nitrogen and phosphorus availability , 2004, Oecologia.
[20] I. Burke,et al. Effects of nitrogen availability on competition between Bromus tectorum and Bouteloua gracilis , 2003, Plant Ecology.
[21] P. Reich,et al. The Evolution of Plant Functional Variation: Traits, Spectra, and Strategies , 2003, International Journal of Plant Sciences.
[22] Gian-Reto Walther,et al. Plants in a warmer world , 2003 .
[23] P. Reich,et al. Do species and functional groups differ in acquisition and use of C, N and water under varying atmospheric CO2 and N availability regimes? : a field test with 16 grassland species , 2001 .
[24] A. Michelsen,et al. Differential responses of grass and a dwarf shrub to long-term changes in soil microbial biomass C, N and P following factorial addition of NPK fertilizer, fungicide and labile carbon to a heath. , 1999, The New phytologist.
[25] Dukes,et al. Does global change increase the success of biological invaders? , 1999, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[26] S. Scheu. Automated measurement of the respiratory response of soil microcompartments: Active microbial biomass in earthworm faeces , 1992 .