Herbivory and plant water status of jojoba [Simmondsia chinensis (Link) Schn.] in the Sonoran Desert in Arizona
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] B. Roundy,et al. Effects of herbivory on twig dynamics of a Sonoran Desert shrub Simmondsia chinensis (Link) Schn. , 1989 .
[2] A. Benzioni,et al. Jojoba: Adaptation to Environmental Stress and the Implications for Domestication , 1986, The Quarterly Review of Biology.
[3] Park S. Nobel,et al. Predictions of Soil-Water Potentials in the North-Western Sonoran Desert , 1986 .
[4] J. Ehleringer. Annuals and Perennials of warm deserts , 1985 .
[5] T. Sammis. Evapotranspiration from an arid zone plant community , 1979 .
[6] T. Sinclair,et al. Changes in Water Potential During Pressure Bomb Measurement1 , 1978 .
[7] P. J. Urness,et al. Comparison of in vivo and in vitro dry matter digestibility of mule deer forages. , 1977 .
[8] J. Adams,et al. Gaseous Exchange of Simmondsia chinensis (Jojoba) Measured with a Double Isotope Porometer and Related to Water Stress, Salt Stress, and Nitrogen Deficiency 1 , 1977 .
[9] W. C. Sherbrooke. Differential Acceptance of Toxic Jojoba Seed (Simmondsia Chinensis) by Four Sonoran Desert Heteromyid Rodents , 1976 .
[10] W. F. Mueggler. Influence of competition on the response of bluebunch wheatgrass to clipping , 1972 .
[11] D. Cable. Competition in the Semidesert Grass‐shrub Type as Influneced by Root Systems, Growth Habits, and Soil Moisture Extraction , 1969 .
[12] P. F. Scholander,et al. Sap Pressure in Vascular Plants , 1965, Science.