Publications by authors named "Alison Mikulyuk"

Article Synopsis
  • Freshwater ecosystems are important for studying how invasive species affect biological communities, particularly using insights from long-term research in North Temperate Lakes.
  • Key findings indicate that invasive species are often more common than previously thought, tend to be in low numbers, and can rapidly increase in response to environmental changes.
  • The study highlights the potential for significant impacts on ecosystems, the importance of monitoring reservoirs as hotspots for invasions, and that removal efforts can benefit ecosystems in the long run.
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Bioassessment methods are critically needed to evaluate and monitor lake ecological condition. Aquatic macrophytes are good candidate indicators, but few lake bioassessment methods developed in North America use them. The few macrophyte bioassessment methods that do exist suffer from problems related to subjectivity and discernibility along disturbance gradients.

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Invasive species are leading drivers of environmental change. Their impacts are often linked to their population size, but surprisingly little is known about how frequently they achieve high abundances. A nearly universal pattern in ecology is that species are rare in most locations and abundant in a few, generating right-skewed abundance distributions.

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Physiological traits that control the uptake of carbon dioxide and loss of water are key determinants of plant growth and reproduction. Variation in these traits is often correlated with environmental gradients of water, light, and nutrients, suggesting that natural selection is the primary evolutionary mechanism responsible for physiological diversification. Responses to selection, however, can be constrained by the amount of standing genetic variation for physiological traits and genetic correlations between these traits.

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